An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place
An Extremely Un-get-atable Place

An Extremely Un-get-atable Place

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An Extremely Un-get-atable Place is a lyrical exploration and re-imagining of the time that George Orwell spent in a remote farmhouse called Barnhill on the Isle of Jura in the Hebrides, Scotland, where between 1946-1949 he lived and wrote his classic dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.

Photographer Craig Easton was invited to stay at Barnhill and there made a series of landscape and still life images with his large format 10x8 field camera. The photographs in An Extremely Un-get-atable Place are presented alongside extracts from Orwell's diaries & letters that he wrote during his life on the island.

This is the first book of 'An Island Trilogy' - three monographs to be published over the next two years all made in the Scottish Islands.