The creator of Animal Farm and 1984 lived a life as original and strange as the books themselves.

Wanting to escape the distractions of London, in September of 1945, Orwell first travelled to Jura, a remote island in the Southwest corner of Scotland. Once there he stumbled upon Barnhill, a remote and unoccupied farmhouse that he immediately leased from its owner.


Orwell got word in August that Animal Farm had not only sold 50,000 copies in the US, but was also now a book-of-the-month club selection, generating an additional 400,000 in sales. In 1946, only Dr. Spock would sell more books.

Orwell was already up to other romantic intrigue. He had met a much younger and beautiful Sonia Brownell when she was an editor at Horizon. Never one for subtlety, he had already proposed to her previously, basically saying that even if she found him unappealing, he wasn’t going to live much longer.
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