Down and Out in Paris and London
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Publishing:6th Mar '25
£8.99
This title is due to be published on 6th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
'You can live on a shilling a day in Paris if you know how. But it is a complicated business'
As a struggling writer in his twenties, Orwell lived as a down-and-out among the poorest members of society. In this, his early memoir, Orwell recalls with vivid clarity his time working as a penniless dishwasher in Paris, pawning clothes to buy a day's worth of bread and wine, sleeping in bug-infested bunks, trading survival skills and cigarette butts with fellow tramps, and trudging between London's workhouse spikes for a few hours' sleep and tea. With all of the sensitivity and compassion that Orwell is known and loved for, he exposed the hardships of poverty and gave readers an unprecedented look at life lived on the fringes of society.
This vivid account is an enduring call to support the world's most vulnerable people and exemplifies his belief that 'The greatest of evils and the worst of crimes is poverty.'
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY KERRY HUDSON
An extraordinary and curious book: beautifully phrased, meticulous, honest and funny. George Orwell’s 1933 memoir, and a study of poverty, is a book both rooted in its era and able to transcend it... a book that has inspired countless people to try to understand the personal and political issues at the heart of homelessness – and continues to do so today. -- Hannah Price
Vivid and lurid and unappetizing, are the pictures he gives of what goes on behind the scenes, human and otherwise * Kirkus *
It was the book of nonfiction in which he becomes George Orwell
ISBN: 9781784878993
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 15mm
Weight: 200g
240 pages