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Books with title Clockwork Orange: Filmscript

  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Hardcover (W.W. Norton and Co., Aug. 16, 1963)
    A Clockwork Orange takes place in a futuristic city governed by a repressive, totalitarian super-State. In this society, ordinary citizens have fallen into a passive stupor of complacency, blind to the insidious growth of a rampant, violent youth culture. The protagonist of the story is Alex, a fifteen-year-old boy who narrates in a teenage slang called nadsat, which incorporates elements of Russian and Cockney English. Alex leads a small gang of teenage criminals—Dim, Pete, and Georgie—through the streets, robbing and beating men and raping women. Alex and his friends spend the rest of their time at the Korova Milkbar, an establishment that serves milk laced with drugs, and a bar called the Duke of New York.
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Gardners Books, Sept. 16, 1998)
    'What we were after ...was lashings of ultra-violence'. In Anthony Burgess' infamous nightmare vision of youth culture in revolt, fifteen-year-old Alex and his friends set out on a diabolical orgy of robbery, rape, torture and murder. Alex is jailed for his teenage delinquency and the State tries to reform him - but at what cost? Burgess writes of social prophecy and free will in this black comedy.
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Hardcover (Buccaneer Books, Jan. 29, 2005)
    The only American edition of the cult classic novel.A vicious fifteen-year-old "droog" is the central character of this 1963 classic, whose stark terror was captured in Stanley Kubrick's magnificent film of the same title. In Anthony Burgess's nightmare vision of the future, where criminals take over after dark, the story is told by the central character, Alex, who talks in a brutal invented slang that brilliantly renders his and his friends' social pathology. A Clockwork Orange is a frightening fable about good and evil, and the meaning of human freedom. When the state undertakes to reform Alex to "redeem" him the novel asks, "At what cost?" This edition includes the controversial last chapter not published in the first edition and Burgess's introduction "A Clockwork Orange Resucked."
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Heyne, March 1, 2000)
    None
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-06-26, June 26, 2008)
    'What we were after ...was lashings of ultra-violence'. In Anthony Burgess' infamous nightmare vision of youth culture in revolt, fifteen-year-old Alex and his friends set out on a diabolical orgy of robbery, rape, torture and murder. Alex is jailed for his teenage delinquency and the State tries to reform him - but at what cost? Burgess writes of social prophecy and free will in this black comedy.
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  • Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Wilhelm Heyne, March 15, 2009)
    Anthony Burgess's modern classic of youthful violence and social redemption, reissued to include the controversial last chapter not previously published in this country, with a new introduction by the author.
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess, Ron Miller, James Gunn

    Leather Bound (Easton Press, Aug. 16, 2000)
    A Clockwork Orange is a 1962 dystopian novella by Anthony Burgess. A satire portraying a future and dystopian Western society with—based on contemporary trends—a culture of extreme youth rebellion and violence: it explores the violent nature of humans, human free will to choose between good or evil, and the desolation of free will as a solution to evil. Burgess experiments with language, writing in a Russian-influenced argot called "Nadsat" used by the younger characters and the anti-hero in his first-person narration. According to Burgess, the novel was a jeu d'esprit written in just three weeks. He bemoaned the fact that the book had been taken as the source material for a 1971 film that was perceived to glorify sex and violence. In 1998, the Modern Library ranked A Clockwork Orange 65th on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century.
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Penguin, Aug. 16, 2000)
    A Clockwork Orange
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Ballantine Books, 1969, Jan. 1, 1969)
    None
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Mass Market Paperback (Ballantine Books, Oct. 12, 1986)
    'What we were after ...was lashings of ultra-violence'. In Anthony Burgess' infamous nightmare vision of youth culture in revolt, fifteen-year-old Alex and his friends set out on a diabolical orgy of robbery, rape, torture and murder. Alex is jailed for his teenage delinquency and the State tries to reform him - but at what cost? Burgess writes of social prophecy and free will in this black comedy.
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  • A Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Mass Market Paperback (Ballantine Books, Sept. 12, 1977)
    None
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  • Clockwork Orange

    Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (W. W. Norton & Company, May 16, 1987)
    'What we were after ...was lashings of ultra-violence'. In Anthony Burgess' infamous nightmare vision of youth culture in revolt, fifteen-year-old Alex and his friends set out on a diabolical orgy of robbery, rape, torture and murder. Alex is jailed for his teenage delinquency and the State tries to reform him - but at what cost? Burgess writes of social prophecy and free will in this black comedy.
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