When Donald Trump was elected president of the US, sales of Nineteen Eighty-Four rocketed, a phenomenon that prompts John Rodden to reconsider the history of its authorâs reputation. He offers interesting material on the role of chance, arguing that George Orwellâs early death was perfectly timed, and highlights some unlikely champions â notably the Catholic journal Commonweal. However, despite elaborate claims on the back cover (from two eminent critics, also named in the acknowledgements as âold friendsâ), there is no convincing attention to literary matters in 300 pages. A section on Orwellâs essay âA Hangingâ offers lengthy quotations interspersed with descriptive paraphrase. The resulting summary, at six pages, is roughly the same length as the essay it describes; one would do better to simply read âA Hangingâ. Rodden goes on to speculate whether the essay is fact or fiction, coming to the unsurprising conclusion that itâs a bit of both. Having concluded this, he reopens the debate five pages laterâŠand arrives again at the same conclusion, like Winnie-the-Pooh on a Woozle hunt.
I take permission to be frank from Roddenâs own unkindness to other critics. He knocks Orwellâs biographer Bernard Crick for being âweak on literary and stylistic mattersâ. Pot and kettle, Iâm afraid. Rodden is happier when treating creative writing as a competitive sport: Orwell, he proclaims with vicarious pride, is âthe most influential writer who has ever livedâ. Several chapters seek to make connections between Orwell and his contemporaries. For example, Rodden makes much of the fact that Orwell and the novelist Jean Malaquais joined the same militia in the Spanish Civil War. This is an interesting nugget, certainly â but it turns out that Malaquais wrote nothing about Spain, so the chapter ends rather lamely; the coincidence is of little consequence. Rodden begins by claiming an âuncanny resemblanceâ and ends by marvelling at âthe yawning gulf between the two menâ. In another somewhat unconvincing chapter, Rodden tries to square his Orwell-worship with his Catholicism. He argues that Orwell was, despite his vigorous atheism, âa religious writerâ because he expresses âChristian valuesâ â implying that all decent impulses are in essence Christian and that only Christians wish for a kinder world.
The book is bewilderingly repetitive. It also reprises several ideas from Roddenâs numerous earlier books on Orwell. Scare quotes are applied to excuse ideas that donât work, as in the phrase âThe Orwell âparadoxâââ (it either is a paradox or it isnât) and the description of Orwell as âevery intellectualâs âbig brotherâââ, a strange misuse of his famous phrase that shears it from its context. One might hope, from an Orwell acolyte, for clarity of expression. Orwell wrote that âGood prose is like a windowpaneâ, but Roddenâs windowpane is in need of a good scrub. Most perplexing is the use of metaphor. Where Orwell skewers his target with a pointed comparison, Rodden misfires. This happens even as he praises Orwellâs style: âIt isâŠso fresh, direct, and clear that we feel we are holding audiobooks of our own making.â How does one hold an audiobook? Why âof our own makingâ? While there are moments of interest in this volume, it has the feel of a work in progress, which makes for a less than satisfying reading experience.
Andrew Palmer is principal lecturer in modern literature at Canterbury Christ Church University and co-author, with Sally Minogue, of The Remembered Dead: Poetry, Memory and the First World War (2018).
Becoming George Orwell: Life and Letters, Legend and Legacy
By John Rodden
Princeton University Press, 384pp, ÂŁ25.00
ISBN 9780691182742
Published 25 February 2020
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Windowpane that sheds no light
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