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Book Cover for: Gulliver's Travels (Warbler Classics Annotated Edition), Jonathan Swift

Gulliver's Travels (Warbler Classics Annotated Edition)

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift skewered society, commerce, politics, and war in his greatest work, Gulliver's Travels. The four-part tale opens with a shipwreck on the island of Lilliput, whose inhabitants are just six inches tall. One fierce controversy concerns which end of an egg to crack open. In part two, Gulliver's ship ends up on Brobdingnag, an island of giants, where he is exhibited as a curiosity and partakes in cutting political tête-à-têtes with its king. In part three, Gulliver encounters Houyhnhnms, horses with the qualities of rational men. These he contrasts with the barbaric Yahoos, brutes in human shape. Finally, Gulliver returns from his travels with bitter insights into the nature of man and the barbarism that underlies so-called civilization. This Warbler Classics edition is based on the complete first edition of 1726, reproduces all of the original illustrations, and includes a biographical timeline of Swift's enigmatic life.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Warbler Classics
  • Publish Date: Jun 26th, 2024
  • Pages: 246
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.50in - 5.50in - 0.56in - 0.70lb
  • EAN: 9781962572804
  • Categories: SatireClassicsPolitical

About the Author

Swift, Jonathan: - Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) was an Anglo-Irish author, political pamphleteer, poet, and Anglican cleric. He is widely considered to be the greatest prose satirist in the English language.

Praise for this book

"Among the six indispensable books in world literature."

-George Orwell


"One of the best and most important books in the world."

-The Globe and Mail


"A masterpiece of sustained and savage indignation."

-The Guardian


"A masterwork of irony...that contains both a dark and bitter meaning and a joyous, extraordinary creativity of imagination."

-Malcolm Bradbury


"Furious, raging, obscene."

-William Thackeray


"The more I read your works, the more I am ashamed of mine."

-Voltaire in a letter to Swift (1728)