![]() Burma’s first civilian government, led by the National League for Democracy party of Aung San Suu Kyi, took power in March this year. Of course, she assiduously protects their anonymity and indeed, Larkin too is a pen name.Īs of 2016, things are moving on in Burma. Her work really shines, and the brutality of the awful regime is most exposed, when she interviews ordinary Burmese about their lives and beliefs – and Orwell, too, whom Burmese intellectuals have long called "the prophet". Larkin’s writing is brisk, sharp and colourful - this is a genuine page-turner. ![]() ![]() She also uses Burma to help explain Orwell’s emergence as a political writer, providing a backgrounder, really, to Burmese Days (published 1934), Animal Farm (1945) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949). This is a travel memoir in only the loosest sense Larkin’s main purpose is to use Orwell as an ideal hook for explaining Burmese history and the state of the nation as of the early 2000s, when it was one of the world’s most repressive and insular dictatorships. ![]() Orwell spent the five years until 1927 in Burma, first in Mandalay, then a series of location including Myaungmya, Twante, Insein, Mawlamyine and eventually Kathar, the setting of his novel Burmese Days. ![]()
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