Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift is a brilliant work of satire, fantasy, travel narrative, and political criticism.
Lemuel Gulliver, a ship's surgeon and traveler, finds himself in a series of extraordinary lands after a succession of voyages and disasters. In Lilliput, he appears as a giant among tiny people; in Brobdingnag, he becomes tiny among giants. Later journeys take him to strange societies of scholars, rulers, philosophers, and finally to the land of the Houyhnhnms, where intelligent horses and degraded humans force him to reconsider human nature itself.
First published in 1726, Swift's book is often remembered as an adventure fantasy, but its true force lies in its biting satire. Through imaginary worlds, Swift attacks political corruption, scientific vanity, imperial arrogance, war, pride, and the illusions of civilization. The humor can be playful, but it is often dark, exposing humanity's absurdity and cruelty.
A major classic of English literature, Gulliver's Travels remains a sharp, inventive, and unsettling masterpiece that speaks to readers both as an imaginative adventure and as a savage critique of society.











