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The Road To Wigan PierThe Road to Wigan Pier was written by George Orwell and published in 1937. It is a sociological look at living conditions in the industrial north of England before World War II. The name of the book comes from a music hall routine by a British comedian. Although a pier is a structure built out into the water from the shore, in Britain the term has the connotation of a seaside holiday, something that it lacks in the US, where "boardwalk" takes this connotation. Wigan was a small, grimy coal town on a river which was accessed by some boats via an offloading structure, though it primarily used land transport. Hence the music-hall joke was that a coal town had its own seaside resort, and Orwell's selection of the phrase in his title was that socialism could improve work life to an unprecedented degree, even in a coal town. See Also External links Road to Wigan Pier Road to Wigan Pier
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