Literary activism begets such gems like A Farewell To Arms. Somebody who had experienced war first-hand writes about why exactly there shouldn't be any wars in the first place. Touched by the honesty and the elegant nonchalance with which he has depicted some of the brutalities of war, the world has...
On completion: I liked this very much. I enjoy Hemingway’s succinct prose. In all its simplicity you are free to fill in all the hidden thoughts. So much more is said than the few simple words. I find the language perfect for the characters, the time period and the circumstances. Others dislike how...
The Author's 1948 IntroductionForeword, by Patrick HemingwayIntroduction, by Seán Hemingway--A Farewell to ArmsAppendix I: Early DraftsAppendix II: The Alternative EndingsAppendix III: List of TitlesAcknowledgementsNotes to the Introduction
The Author's 1948 IntroductionForeword, by Patrick HemingwayIntroduction, by Seán Hemingway--A Farewell to ArmsAppendix I: Early DraftsAppendix II: The Alternative EndingsAppendix III: List of TitlesAcknowledgementsNotes to the Introduction
I think favorite books are often just as much a matter of fate as the quality of the work itself. When I read Farewell to Arms the winter of 2011, I was in just the right place to be awed by Hemingway's novel of love in the midst of war. It's really too bad that Hemingway's reputation so often overs...
I know Hemingway was great writer but I didn't enjoy this book. He kept repeating unimportant dialogues and focused on uninteresting events; it was bloody boring. He succeeded in showing how ugly and stupid is the war; I really didn't enjoy being in that universe. I'm glad I managed to finish the bo...
Widely considered to be on the greatest anti-war novels ever written, A Farewell to Arms, tells the story of American Frederic Henry and his experiences as an ambulance driver in the Italian Army during WWI. During the course of the war, he meets and falls in love with a British nurse, Catherine Ba...
A great book, and I love Hemingway's "refusal of interiority" writing style. Thematically though, it feels slightly flat and one-dimensional - I could even say that the way Hemingway imports reflections about life in general appears very contrived (especially in Henry's "internal monologues", which ...
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