George Orwell’s friend Richard Rees painted this of Orwell’s bedroom at Barnhill on the island of Jura. It’s where Orwell finished Nineteen Eighty-Four.
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from Spain

seen from Germany
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
George Orwell’s friend Richard Rees painted this of Orwell’s bedroom at Barnhill on the island of Jura. It’s where Orwell finished Nineteen Eighty-Four.
The view from the room at Barnhill where George Orwell re-wrote, edited, and finished Nineteen Eighty-Four as he was dying from tuberculosis. He would drag himself from his bed to his desk. The book was finally finished 70 years ago this December and sent to his publishers in January 1949. Photo taken by Jackie Jura.
Some views of Barnhill on the island of Jura, off the coast of Scotland, the house Orwell rented about seventy-years-ago. In fact, these photos are probably from the summer of 1947, the start of them living their year-round after completely leaving the flat on Canonbury Square in Islington, London (the winter of 1946/1947 was a particularly brutal one and I’m sure that helped with the decision).
Barnhill is, of course, where George Orwell finished with 1984 and set up on the grueling task of typing up the final manuscript by himself, while dying of tuberculosis (there were no women from London who wanted to make the arduous trek from London to Jura just to type).
In the bottom photo is a figure working in the yard who looks a lot like George Orwell, tall with his signature clothes.
I have no idea who took these photos but if I had to guess I would say it was his younger sister, Avril.
George Orwell in front of Barnhill on the island of Jura, off the coast of Scotland. Probably either summer of 1946 or 1947.
Isle of Jura - 2
This is a sight to behold, between the east coast of Jura and the uninhabited island of Scarba. It’s not just a whirlpool, it’s a tidal race too where the waters of the Atlantic get forced into a steep-sided channel with its very own underwater pinnacle called The Hag, that creates the vortex you see on the surface. The Royal Navy does class this area as unsailable, although fast speed boats do…
Isle of Jura - 1
The first item to mention about Jura is that the Jurassic period is not named after this island, but after the Jura Mountains that form part of the border between Switzerland and France. The name of the island is usually attributed to the Norse meaning ‘Deer Island’, although in Gaelic the word ‘diura’ means ‘tough or durable’. I caught the ferry from Port Askaig on Islay to Feolin on Jura.…
In Which I Read that Dragon Book, Part Two
Come along with me on the second part of my reading journey of When Women Were Dragons. Why am I doing this to myself? It's complicated! #podcast #novel #dragons
This is part two of my journey of reading When Women Were Dragons. If you want to know why I’m reading this, catch up with my questions around plagiarism here. If you want to read Part One, start here. And I’m just a fountain of spoilers so skip this one if you’re wanting to be surprised by anything that happens in this book. Now PART 2 September 4 I can really feel how Barnhill is a…
View On WordPress
Review: Barnhill by Norman Bissell
Review: Barnhill by Norman Bissell
Barnhill: A NovelAuthor: Norman BissellPublisher: Luath PressReleased: May 6, 2019Received: NetGalley Are you more than a little bit obsessed with George Orwell’s 1984? Well then, you’re going to enjoy reading Barnhill: A Novel. Norman Bissell’s novel takes place at Barnhill – the location that George Orwell (Eric Arthur Blair) famously tucked himself away in – and the birthplace of 1984.…
View On WordPress