51WR4ZWCDPL. SL160  Book Review | Lord of the Flies by William GoldingLord of the Flies by William Golding is about the disintegration of civilisation

My Book Review Rating: 3 stars – an intriguing but shocking novel about a tribe of boys stranded on a desert island.

This was another book that I picked up for the Classics Challenge, and I can’t actually believe I’ve reached the wise old age of 32 without reading it! I always thought Lord of the Flies was just a book about a group of young boys stuck on a desert island — but as is usually the case with esteemed classics it is so much more than that!

Golding uses the premise to explore the rules of civilisation and savagery. When the boys first crash on the island their instinct is to create rules; a leader, a designated place to wash and sleep, assigning roles to different groups so that the camp runs smoothly. When conflict arises between the two main characters Ralph, the appointed leader and Jack, the wannabe leader, the rules begin to break down and the camp divides into two.

The novel also explores the loss of innocence; I was quite shocked at times at the savagery and violence displayed by the boys, and death is quite key to the novel’s themes.

Overall I enjoyed reading Lord of the Flies and only wish that it had been a set text at school so that I could have spent some time really exploring the themes and the symbols throughout the novel (although if I had done I probably would have hated every minute!).

LORD OF THE FLIES (With a biographical and critical note by E.L. Epstein, and a portrait of the author) (WIDEVIEW/PERIGEE BOOKS)

 Book Review | Lord of the Flies by William Golding