© POETRY SOCIETY – USA
Ernest M. Hemingway
1899–1961
"THE
WRITER'S JOB IS TO TELL THE TRUTH,"
ERNEST HEMINGWAY ONCE SAID. WHEN HE WAS HAVING DIFFICULTY WRITING HE
REMINDED HIMSELF OF THIS, AS HE EXPLAINED IN HIS MEMOIRS,A
MOVEABLE FEAST. "I
WOULD STAND AND LOOK OUT OVER THE ROOFS OF PARIS AND THINK, 'DO NOT
WORRY. YOU HAVE ALWAYS WRITTEN BEFORE AND YOU WILL WRITE NOW. ALL
YOU HAVE TO DO IS WRITE ONE TRUE SENTENCE. WRITE THE TRUEST SENTENCE
THAT YOU KNOW.' SO FINALLY I WOULD WRITE ONE TRUE SENTENCE, AND THEN
GO ON FROM THERE. IT WAS EASY THEN BECAUSE THERE WAS ALWAYS ONE TRUE
SENTENCE THAT I KNEW OR HAD SEEN OR HAD HEARD SOMEONE
SAY." HEMINGWAY'S
PERSONAL AND ARTISTIC QUESTS FOR TRUTH WERE DIRECTLY RELATED.
AS EARL ROVIT NOTED: "MORE OFTEN THAN NOT, HEMINGWAY'S FICTIONS
SEEM ROOTED IN HIS JOURNEYS INTO HIMSELF MUCH MORE CLEARLY AND
OBSESSIVELY THAN IS USUALLY THE CASE WITH MAJOR FICTION WRITERS....
HIS WRITING WAS HIS WAY OF APPROACHING HIS IDENTITY—OF DISCOVERING
HIMSELF IN THE PROJECTED METAPHORS OF HIS EXPERIENCE. HE BELIEVED
THAT IF HE COULD SEE HIMSELF CLEAR AND WHOLE, HIS VISION MIGHT BE
USEFUL TO OTHERS WHO ALSO LIVED IN THIS WORLD." THE
PUBLIC'S ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE PERSONAL LIFE OF HEMINGWAY WAS
PERHAPS GREATER THAN WITH ANY OTHER MODERN NOVELIST. HE WAS WELL
KNOWN AS A SPORTSMAN AND BON
VIVANT AND
HIS ESCAPADES WERE COVERED IN SUCH POPULAR MAGAZINES
AS LIFE AND ESQUIRE.HEMINGWAY
BECAME A LEGENDARY FIGURE, WROTE JOHN W. ALDRIDGE, "A KIND OF
TWENTIETH-CENTURY LORD BYRON; AND LIKE BYRON, HE HAD LEARNED TO PLAY
HIMSELF, HIS OWN BEST HERO, WITH SUPERB CONVICTION. HE WAS HEMINGWAY
OF THE RUGGED OUTDOOR GRIN AND THE HAIRY CHEST POSING BESIDE A
MARLIN HE HAD JUST LANDED OR A LION HE HAD JUST SHOT; HE WAS TARZAN
HEMINGWAY, CROUCHING IN THE AFRICAN BUSH WITH ELEPHANT GUN AT READY,
BWANA HEMINGWAY COMMANDING HIS NATIVE BEARERS IN TERSE SWAHILI; HE
WAS WAR CORRESPONDENT HEMINGWAY WRITING A PLAY IN THE HOTEL FLORIDA
IN MADRID WHILE THIRTY FASCIST SHELLS CRASHED THROUGH THE ROOF;
LATER ON HE WAS TASK FORCE HEMINGWAY SWATHED IN AMMUNITION BELTS AND
DEFENDING HIS POST SINGLEHANDED AGAINST FIERCE GERMAN ATTACKS."
ANTHONY BURGESS DECLARED: "RECONCILING LITERATURE AND ACTION,
HE FULFILLED FOR ALL WRITERS, THE SICKROOM DREAM OF LEAVING THE DESK
FOR THE ARENA, AND THEN RETURNING TO THE DESK. HE WROTE GOOD AND
LIVED GOOD, AND BOTH ACTIVITIES WERE THE SAME. THE PEN HANDLED WITH
THE ACCURACY OF THE RIFLE; SWEAT AND DIGNITY; BAGS
OFCOJONES." HEMINGWAY'S
SEARCH FOR TRUTH AND ACCURACY OF EXPRESSION
IS REFLECTED IN HIS TERSE, ECONOMICAL PROSE STYLE, WHICH IS WIDELY
ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE HIS GREATEST CONTRIBUTION TO LITERATURE. WHAT
FREDERICK J. HOFFMAN CALLED HEMINGWAY'S "ESTHETIC OF
SIMPLICITY" INVOLVES A "BASIC STRUGGLE FOR ABSOLUTE
ACCURACY IN MAKING WORDS CORRESPOND TO EXPERIENCE." FOR
HEMINGWAY, WILLIAM BARRETT COMMENTED, "STYLE WAS A MORAL ACT, A
DESPERATE STRUGGLE FOR MORAL PROBITY AMID THE CONFUSIONS OF THE
WORLD AND THE SLIPPERY COMPLEXITIES OF ONE'S OWN NATURE. TO SET
THINGS DOWN SIMPLE AND RIGHT IS TO HOLD A STANDARD OF RIGHTNESS
AGAINST A DECEIVING WORLD." IN
A DISCUSSION OF HEMINGWAY'S STYLE, SHELDON
NORMAN GREBSTEIN LISTED THESE CHARACTERISTICS: "FIRST, SHORT
AND SIMPLE SENTENCE CONSTRUCTIONS, WITH HEAVY USE OF PARALLELISM,
WHICH CONVEY THE EFFECT OF CONTROL, TERSENESS, AND BLUNT HONESTY;
SECOND, PURGED DICTION WHICH ABOVE ALL ESCHEWS THE USE OF BOOKISH,
LATINATE, OR ABSTRACT WORDS AND THUS ACHIEVES THE EFFECT OF BEING
HEARD OR SPOKEN OR TRANSCRIBED FROM REALITY RATHER THAN APPEARING AS
A CONSTRUCT OF THE IMAGINATION (IN BRIEF, VERISIMILITUDE); AND
THIRD, SKILLFUL USE OF REPETITION AND A KIND OF VERBAL COUNTERPOINT,
WHICH OPERATE EITHER BY PAIRING OR JUXTAPOSING OPPOSITES, OR ELSE BY
RUNNING THE SAME WORD OR PHRASE THROUGH A SERIES OF SHIFTING
MEANINGS AND INFLECTIONS." ONE
OF HEMINGWAY'S GREATEST VIRTUES AS A WRITER WAS HIS SELF-DISCIPLINE.
HE DESCRIBED HOW HE ACCOMPLISHED THIS IN A
MOVEABLE FEAST. "IF
I STARTED TO WRITE ELABORATELY, OR LIKE SOMEONE INTRODUCING OR
PRESENTING SOMETHING, I FOUND THAT I COULD CUT THAT SCROLLWORK OR
ORNAMENT OUT AND THROW IT AWAY AND START WITH THE FIRST TRUE SIMPLE
DECLARATIVE SENTENCE I HAD WRITTEN.... I DECIDED THAT I WOULD WRITE
ONE STORY ABOUT EACH THING THAT I KNEW ABOUT. I WAS TRYING TO DO
THIS ALL THE TIME I WAS WRITING, AND IT WAS GOOD AND SEVERE
DISCIPLINE." HIS EARLY TRAINING IN JOURNALISM AS A REPORTER FOR
THEKANSAS
CITY STAR AND
THE TORONTO
STAR IS
OFTEN MENTIONED AS A FACTOR IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF HIS LEAN STYLE.
LATER, AS A FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT HE LEARNED THE EVEN MORE
RIGOROUSLY ECONOMIC LANGUAGE OF "CABLESE," IN WHICH EACH
WORD MUST CONVEY THE MEANING OF SEVERAL OTHERS. WHILE HEMINGWAY
ACKNOWLEDGED HIS DEBT TO JOURNALISM INDEATH
IN THE AFTERNOON BY
COMMENTING THAT "IN WRITING FOR A NEWSPAPER YOU TOLD WHAT
HAPPENED AND WITH ONE TRICK AND ANOTHER, YOU COMMUNICATED THE
EMOTION TO ANY ACCOUNT OF SOMETHING THAT HAS HAPPENED ON THAT DAY,"
HE ADMITTED THAT THE HARDEST PART OF FICTION WRITING, "THE REAL
THING," WAS CONTRIVING "THE SEQUENCE OF MOTION AND FACT
WHICH MADE THE EMOTION AND WHICH WOULD BE VALID IN A YEAR OR TEN
YEARS OR, WITH LUCK AND IF YOU STATED IT PURELY ENOUGH,
ALWAYS." ALTHOUGH
HEMINGWAY HAS NAMED NUMEROUS WRITERS AS HIS LITERARY INFLUENCES,
HIS CONTEMPORARIES MENTIONED MOST OFTEN IN THIS REGARD ARE RING
LARDNER, SHERWOOD ANDERSON, EZRA
POUND,
AND GERTRUDE
STEIN. MALCOLM
COWLEY ASSESSED
THE IMPORTANCE OF STEIN AND POUND (WHO WERE BOTH FRIENDS OF
HEMINGWAY) TO HIS LITERARY DEVELOPMENT, WHILE STRESSING THAT THE
EDUCATIONAL RELATIONSHIP WAS MUTUAL. "ONE THING HE TOOK PARTLY
FROM HER [STEIN] WAS A COLLOQUIAL—IN APPEARANCE—AMERICAN STYLE,
FULL OF REPEATED WORDS, PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES, AND PRESENT
PARTICIPLES, THE STYLE IN WHICH HE WROTE HIS EARLY PUBLISHED
STORIES. ONE THING HE TOOK FROM POUND—IN RETURN FOR TRYING VAINLY
TO TEACH HIM TO BOX—WAS THE DOCTRINE OF THE ACCURATE IMAGE, WHICH
HE APPLIED IN THE 'CHAPTERS' PRINTED BETWEEN THE STORIES THAT WENT
INTO IN
OUR TIME; BUT
HEMINGWAY ALSO LEARNED FROM HIM TO BLUEPENCIL MOST OF HIS
ADJECTIVES." HEMINGWAY HAS COMMENTED THAT HE LEARNED HOW TO
WRITE AS MUCH FROM PAINTERS AS FROM OTHER WRITERS. CEZANNE WAS ONE
OF HIS FAVORITE PAINTERS AND WRIGHT MORRIS HAS COMPARED HEMINGWAY'S
STYLISTIC METHOD TO THAT OF CEZANNE. "A CEZANNE-LIKE SIMPLICITY
OF SCENE IS BUILT UP WITH THE TOUCHES OF A MASTER, AND THE GREAT
EFFECTS ARE ACHIEVED WITH A SUBLIME ECONOMY. AT THESE MOMENTS STYLE
AND SUBSTANCE ARE OF ONE PIECE, EACH GROWING FROM THE OTHER, AND ONE
CANNOT IMAGINE THAT LIFE COULD EXIST EXCEPT AS DESCRIBED. WE THINK
ONLY OF WHAT IS THERE, AND NOT, AS IN THE LESS SUCCESSFUL MOMENTS,
OF ALL OF THE ELEMENTS OF EXPERIENCE THAT ARE NOT." WHILE
MOST CRITICS HAVE FOUND HEMINGWAY'S PROSE EXEMPLARY
(JACKSON J. BENSON CLAIMED THAT HE HAD "PERHAPS THE BEST EAR
THAT HAS EVER BEEN BROUGHT TO THE CREATION OF ENGLISH PROSE"),
LESLIE A. FIEDLER COMPLAINED THAT HEMINGWAY LEARNED TO WRITE
"THROUGH THE EYE RATHER THAN THE EAR. IF HIS LANGUAGE IS
COLLOQUIAL, IT IS WRITTENCOLLOQUIAL,
FOR HE WAS CONSTITUTIONALLY INCAPABLE OF HEARING ENGLISH AS IT WAS
SPOKEN AROUND HIM. TO A CRITIC WHO ONCE ASKED HIM WHY HIS CHARACTERS
ALL SPOKE ALIKE, HEMINGWAY ANSWERED, 'BECAUSE I NEVER LISTEN TO
ANYBODY.'" HEMINGWAY'S
EARLIER NOVELS AND SHORT STORIES WERE LARGELY PRAISED
FOR THEIR UNIQUE STYLE. PAUL
GOODMAN,
FOR EXAMPLE, WAS PLEASED WITH THE "SWEETNESS" OF THE
WRITING IN A
FAREWELL TO ARMS. "WHEN
IT [SWEETNESS] APPEARS, THE SHORT SENTENCES COALESCE AND FLOW, AND
SING—SOMETIMES MELANCHOLY, SOMETIMES PASTORAL, SOMETIMES
PERSONALLY EMBARRASSED IN AN ADULT, NOT ADOLESCENT, WAY. IN THE
DIALOGUES, HE PAYS LOVING ATTENTION TO THE SPOKEN WORD. AND THE
WRITING IS METICULOUS; HE IS SWEETLY DEVOTED TO WRITING WELL. MOST
EVERYTHING ELSE IS RESIGNED, BUT HERE HE MAKES AN EFFORT, AND THE
EFFORT PRODUCES LOVELY MOMENTS." BUT
IN HIS LATER
WORKS, PARTICULARLY ACROSS
THE RIVER AND INTO THE TREES AND
THE POSTHUMOUSLY PUBLISHED ISLANDS
IN THE STREAM, THE
HEMINGWAY STYLE DEGENERATED INTO NEAR SELF-PARODY. "IN THE BEST
OF EARLY HEMINGWAY IT ALWAYS SEEMED THAT IF EXACTLY THE RIGHT WORDS
IN EXACTLY THE RIGHT ORDER WERE NOT CHOSEN, SOMETHING MONSTROUS
WOULD OCCUR, AN UNIMAGINABLY DELICATE INTERNAL WARNING SYSTEM WOULD
BE THROWN OUT OF ADJUSTMENT, AND SOME PRINCIPLE OF PERSONAL AND
ARTISTIC INTEGRITY WOULD BE FATALLY COMPROMISED," JOHN ALDRIDGE
WROTE. "BUT BY THE TIME HE CAME TO WRITE THE
OLD MAN AND THE SEA THERE
SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN NOTHING AT STAKE EXCEPT THE PROFESSIONAL
OBLIGATION TO SOUND AS MUCH LIKE HEMINGWAY AS POSSIBLE. THE MAN HAD
DISAPPEARED BEHIND THE MANNERISM, THE ARTIST BEHIND THE ARTIFICE,
AND ALL THAT WAS LEFT WAS A COLDLY FLAWLESS FACADE OF WORDS."
FOSTER HIRSCH FOUND THAT HEMINGWAY'S "MAWKISH
SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IS ESPECIALLY EVIDENT IN ISLANDS
IN THE STREAM." ACROSS THE RIVER AND INTO THE
TREES, ACCORDING
TO PHILIP RAHV, "READS LIKE A PARODY BY THE AUTHOR OF HIS OWN
MANNER—A PARODY SO BITING THAT IT VIRTUALLY DESTROYS THE MIXED
SOCIAL AND LITERARY LEGEND OF HEMINGWAY." AND CARLOS BAKER
WROTE: "IN THE LESSER WORKS OF HIS FINAL YEARS ... NOSTALGIA
DROVE HIM TO THE POINT OF EXPLOITING HIS PERSONAL IDIOSYNCRASIES, AS
IF HE HOPED TO PERSUADE READERS TO ACCEPT THESE IN LIEU OF THAT
POWERFUL UNION OF OBJECTIVE DISCERNMENT AND SUBJECTIVE RESPONSE
WHICH HE HAD ONCE BEEN ABLE TO ACHIEVE." BUT
HEMINGWAY WAS NEVER HIS OWN WORST IMITATOR.
HE WAS PERHAPS THE MOST INFLUENTIAL WRITER OF HIS GENERATION AND
SCORES OF WRITERS, PARTICULARLY THE HARD-BOILED WRITERS OF THE
THIRTIES, ATTEMPTED TO ADAPT HIS TOUGH, UNDERSTATED PROSE TO THEIR
OWN WORKS, USUALLY WITHOUT SUCCESS. AS CLINTON S. BURHANS, JR.,
NOTED: "THE FAMOUS AND EXTRAORDINARILY ELOQUENT CONCRETENESS OF
HEMINGWAY'S STYLE IS INIMITABLE PRECISELY BECAUSE IT IS NOT
PRIMARILY STYLISTIC: THE HOW OF HEMINGWAY'S STYLE IS THE WHAT OF HIS
CHARACTERISTIC VISION." IT
IS THIS ORGANICISM, THE SKILLFUL BLEND OF STYLE AND SUBSTANCE,
THAT MADE HEMINGWAY'S WORKS SO SUCCESSFUL, DESPITE THE FACT THAT
MANY CRITICS HAVE COMPLAINED THAT HE LACKED VISION. HEMINGWAY
AVOIDED INTELLECTUALISM BECAUSE HE THOUGHT IT SHALLOW AND
PRETENTIOUS. HIS UNIQUE VISION DEMANDED THE EXPRESSION OF EMOTION
THROUGH THE DESCRIPTION OF ACTION RATHER THAN OF PASSIVE THOUGHT.
IN DEATH
IN THE AFTERNOON,HEMINGWAY
EXPLAINED, "I WAS TRYING TO WRITE THEN AND I FOUND THE GREATEST
DIFFICULTY, ASIDE FROM KNOWING TRULY WHAT YOU REALLY FELT, RATHER
THAN WHAT YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO FEEL, WAS TO PUT DOWN WHAT REALLY
HAPPENED IN ACTION; WHAT THE ACTUAL THINGS WERE WHICH PRODUCED THE
EMOTION YOU EXPERIENCED." EVEN
MORALITY, FOR HEMINGWAY, WAS A CONSEQUENCE OF ACTION AND EMOTION.
HE STATED HIS MORAL CODE IN DEATH
IN THE AFTERNOON: "WHAT
IS MORAL IS WHAT YOU FEEL GOOD AFTER AND WHAT IS IMMORAL IS WHAT YOU
FEEL BAD AFTER." LADY BRETT ASHLEY, IN THE
SUN ALSO RISES,VOICES
THIS PRAGMATIC MORALITY AFTER SHE HAS DECIDED TO LEAVE A YOUNG
BULLFIGHTER, BELIEVING THE BREAK TO BE IN HIS BEST INTERESTS. SHE
SAYS: "YOU KNOW IT MAKES ONE FEEL RATHER GOOD DECIDING NOT TO
BE A BITCH.... IT'S SORT OF WHAT WE HAVE INSTEAD OF
GOD." HEMINGWAY'S
PERCEPTION OF THE WORLD AS DEVOID OF TRADITIONAL VALUES AND TRUTHS
AND INSTEAD MARKED BY DISILLUSIONMENT AND MORIBUND IDEALISM, IS A
CHARACTERISTICALLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY VISION. WORLD WAR I WAS A
WATERSHED FOR HEMINGWAY AND HIS GENERATION. AS AN AMBULANCE DRIVER
IN THE ITALIAN INFANTRY, HEMINGWAY HAD BEEN SEVERELY WOUNDED. THE
WAR EXPERIENCE AFFECTED HIM PROFOUNDLY, AS HE TOLD MALCOLM COWLEY.
"IN THE FIRST WAR I WAS HURT VERY BADLY; IN THE BODY, MIND, AND
SPIRIT, AND ALSO MORALLY." THE HEROES OF HIS NOVELS WERE
SIMILARLY WOUNDED. ACCORDING TO MAX WESTBROOK THEY "AWAKE TO A
WORLD GONE TO HELL. WORLD WAR I HAS DESTROYED BELIEF IN THE GOODNESS
OF NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS. THE DEPRESSION HAS ISOLATED MAN FROM HIS
NATURAL BROTHERHOOD. INSTITUTIONS, CONCEPTS, AND INSIDIOUS GROUPS OF
FRIENDS AND WAYS OF LIFE ARE, WHEN ACCURATELY SEEN, A TYRANNY, A
SENTIMENTAL OR PROPAGANDISTIC RATIONALIZATION." BOTH
OF HEMINGWAY'S FIRST TWO MAJOR NOVELS, THE
SUN ALSO RISES AND A
FAREWELL TO ARMS, WERE
"PRIMARILY DESCRIPTIONS OF A SOCIETY THAT HAD LOST THE
POSSIBILITY OF BELIEF. THEY WERE DOMINATED BY AN ATMOSPHERE OF
GOTHIC RUIN, BOREDOM, STERILITY AND DECAY," JOHN ALDRIDGE
WROTE. "YET IF THEY HAD BEEN NOTHING MORE THAN DESCRIPTIONS,
THEY WOULD INEVITABLY HAVE BEEN AS EMPTY OF MEANING AS THE THING
THEY WERE DESCRIBING." WHILE ALAN LEBOWITZ CONTENDED THAT
BECAUSE THE THEME OF DESPAIR "IS ALWAYS AN END IN ITSELF, THE
FICTION MERELY ITS TRANSCRIPTION,... IT IS A DEAD END,"
ALDRIDGE BELIEVED THAT HEMINGWAY MANAGED TO SAVE THE NOVELS BY
SALVAGING THE CHARACTERS' VALUES AND TRANSCRIBING THEM "INTO A
KIND OF MORAL NETWORK THAT LINKED THEM TOGETHER IN A UNIFIED PATTERN
OF MEANING." IN
THE SEARCH FOR MEANING HEMINGWAY'S CHARACTERS NECESSARILY CONFRONT
VIOLENCE.
OMNIPRESENT VIOLENCE IS A FACT OF EXISTENCE, ACCORDING TO HEMINGWAY.
EVEN IN WORKS SUCH AS THE
SUN ALSO RISES IN
WHICH VIOLENCE PLAYS A MINIMAL ROLE, IT IS ALWAYS PRESENT
SUBLIMINALLY—"WOVEN INTO THE STRUCTURE OF LIFE ITSELF,"
WILLIAM BARRETT REMARKED. IN OTHER WORKS VIOLENCE IS MORE OBTRUSIVE:
THE WARS IN A
FAREWELL TO ARMS AND FOR
WHOM THE BELL TOLLS, THE
HOSTILITY OF NATURE WHICH IS PARTICULARLY EVIDENT IN THE SHORT
STORIES, AND THE VIOLENT SPORTS SUCH AS BULLFIGHTING AND BIG GAME
HUNTING THAT ARE PORTRAYED IN NUMEROUS WORKS. "HEMINGWAY
IS THE DRAMATIST OF THE EXTREME SITUATION.
HIS OVERRIDING THEME IS HONOUR, PERSONAL HONOUR: BY WHAT SHALL A MAN
LIVE, BY WHAT SHALL A MAN DIE, IN A WORLD THE ESSENTIAL CONDITION OF
WHOSE BEING IS VIOLENCE?" WALTER ALLEN WROTE. "THESE
PROBLEMS ARE POSED RATHER THAN ANSWERED IN HIS FIRST BOOK IN
OUR TIME, A
COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES IN WHICH ALMOST ALL OF HEMINGWAY'S LATER
WORK IS CONTAINED BY IMPLICATION." THE
CODE BY WHICH HEMINGWAY'S HEROES MUST LIVE
(PHILIP YOUNG HAS TERMED THEM "CODE HEROES") IS CONTINGENT
ON THE QUALITIES OF COURAGE, SELF-CONTROL, AND "GRACE UNDER
PRESSURE." IRVING HOWE HAS DESCRIBED THE TYPICAL HEMINGWAY HERO
AS A MAN "WHO IS WOUNDED BUT BEARS HIS WOUNDS IN SILENCE, WHO
IS DEFEATED BUT FINDS A REMNANT OF DIGNITY IN AN HONEST
CONFRONTATION OF DEFEAT." FURTHERMORE, THE HERO'S GREAT DESIRE
MUST BE TO "SALVAGE FROM THE COLLAPSE OF SOCIAL LIFE A VERSION
OF STOICISM THAT CAN MAKE SUFFERING BEARABLE; THE HOPE THAT IN
DIRECT PHYSICAL SENSATION, THE COLD WATER OF THE CREEK IN WHICH ONE
FISHES OR THE PURITY OF THE WINE MADE BY SPANISH PEASANTS, THERE CAN
BE FOUND AN EXPERIENCE THAT CAN RESIST CORRUPTION." HEMINGWAY
HAS BEEN ACCUSED OF EXPLOITING AND SENSATIONALIZING VIOLENCE.
HOWEVER,
LEO GURKO REMARKED THAT "THE MOTIVE BEHIND HEMINGWAY'S HEROIC
FIGURES IS NOT GLORY, OR FORTUNE, OR THE RIGHTING OF INJUSTICE, OR
THE THIRST FOR EXPERIENCE. THEY ARE INSPIRED NEITHER BY VANITY NOR
AMBITION NOR A DESIRE TO BETTER THE WORLD. THEY HAVE NO THOUGHTS OF
REACHING A STATE OF HIGHER GRACE OR VIRTUE. INSTEAD, THEIR BEHAVIOR
IS A REACTION TO THE MORAL EMPTINESS OF THE UNIVERSE, AN EMPTINESS
THAT THEY FEEL COMPELLED TO FILL BY THEIR OWN SPECIAL EFFORTS." IF
LIFE IS AN ENDURANCE CONTEST AND THE HERO'S RESPONSE TO IT
IS PRESCRIBED AND CODIFIED, THE VIOLENCE ITSELF IS STYLIZED. AS
WILLIAM BARRETT ASSERTED: "IT IS ALWAYS PLAYED, EVEN IN NATURE,
PERHAPS ABOVE ALL IN NATURE, ACCORDING TO SOME FORM. THE VIOLENCE
ERUPTS WITHIN THE PATTERNS OF WAR OR THE PATTERNS OF THE BULLRING."
CLINTON S. BURHANS, JR., IS CONVINCED THAT HEMINGWAY'S "FASCINATION
WITH BULLFIGHTING STEMS FROM HIS VIEW OF IT AS AN ART FORM, A RITUAL
TRAGEDY IN WHICH MAN CONFRONTS THE CREATURAL REALITIES OF VIOLENCE,
PAIN, SUFFERING, AND DEATH BY IMPOSING ON THEM AN ESTHETIC FORM
WHICH GIVES THEM ORDER, SIGNIFICANCE, AND BEAUTY." IT
IS NOT NECESSARY (OR EVEN POSSIBLE) TO UNDERSTAND THE COMPLEX
UNIVERSE—IT
IS ENOUGH FOR HEMINGWAY'S HEROES TO FIND SOLACE IN BEAUTY AND ORDER.
SANTIAGO IN THE
OLD MAN AND THE SEA CANNOT
UNDERSTAND WHY HE MUST KILL THE GREAT FISH HE HAS COME TO LOVE,
BURHANS NOTED. HEMINGWAY DESCRIBED SANTIAGO'S CONFUSION: "I DO
NOT UNDERSTAND THESE THINGS, HE THOUGHT. BUT IT IS GOOD WE DO NOT
TRY TO KILL THE SUN OR THE MOON OR THE STARS. IT IS ENOUGH TO LIVE
ON THE SEA AND KILL OUR BROTHERS." DESPITE
HEMINGWAY'S PESSIMISM, IHAB
HASSAN DECLARED THAT IT IS "PERVERSE TO SEE ONLY THE EMPTINESS
OF HEMINGWAY'S WORLD. IN ITS LUCID SPACES, A VISION OF ARCHETYPAL
UNITY REIGNS. OPPOSITE FORCES OBEY A COMMON DESTINY; ENEMIES
DISCOVER THEIR DEEPER IDENTITY; THE HUNTER AND THE HUNTED MERGE. THE
MATADOR PLUNGES HIS SWORD, AND FOR AN INSTANT IN ETERNITY, MAN AND
BEAST ARE THE SAME. THIS IS THE MOMENT OF TRUTH, AND IT SERVES
HEMINGWAY AS SYMBOL OF THE UNITY WHICH UNDERLIES BOTH LOVE AND
DEATH. HIS FATALISM, HIS TOLERANCE OF BLOODSHED, HIS STOICAL RESERVE
BEFORE THE MALICE OF CREATION, BETRAY A SACRAMENTAL ATTITUDE THAT
TRANSCENDS ANY PERSONAL FATE." DEATH
IS NOT THE ULTIMATE FEAR: THE HEMINGWAY HERO KNOWS HOW TO CONFRONT
DEATH.
WHAT HE TRULY FEARS IS NADA (THE
SPANISH WORD FOR NOTHING)-EXISTENCE IN A STATE OF NONBEING.
HEMINGWAY'S CHARACTERS ARE ALONE. HE IS NOT CONCERNED WITH HUMAN
RELATIONSHIPS AS MUCH AS WITH PORTRAYING MAN'S INDIVIDUAL STRUGGLE
AGAINST AN ALIEN, CHAOTIC UNIVERSE. HIS CHARACTERS EXIST IN THE
"ISLAND CONDITION," STEPHEN L. TANNER HAS NOTED. HE
COMPARED THEM TO THE ISLANDS OF AN ARCHIPELAGO "CONSISTENTLY
ISOLATED [AND] ALONE IN THE STREAM OF SOCIETY." SEVERAL
CRITICS HAVE NOTED THAT HEMINGWAY'S NOVELS SUFFER BECAUSE
OF HIS OVERRIDING CONCERN WITH THE INDIVIDUAL. FOR
WHOM THE BELL TOLLS, A
NOVEL ABOUT THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR, HAS ENGENDERED CONTROVERSY ON
THIS MATTER. WHILE IT IS OSTENSIBLY A POLITICAL NOVEL ABOUT A CAUSE
THAT HEMINGWAY BELIEVED IN FERVENTLY, CRITICS SUCH AS ALVAH C.
BESSIE WERE DISAPPOINTED THAT HEMINGWAY WAS STILL CONCERNED
EXCLUSIVELY WITH THE PERSONAL. "THE CAUSE OF SPAIN DOES NOT, IN
ANY ESSENTIAL WAY,
FIGURE AS A MOTIVATING POWER, A DRIVING, EMOTIONAL, PASSIONAL FORCE
IN THIS STORY." BESSIE WROTE. "IN THE WIDEST SENSE, THAT
CAUSE IS ACTUALLY IRRELEVANT TO THE NARRATIVE. FOR THE AUTHOR IS
LESS CONCERNED WITH THE FATE OF THE SPANISH PEOPLE, WHOM I AM
CERTAIN HE LOVES, THAN HE IS WITH THE FATE OF HIS HERO AND HEROINE,
WHO ARE HIMSELF.... FOR ALL HIS GROPING THE AUTHOR OF THE BELL HAS
YET TO INTEGRATE HIS INDIVIDUAL SENSITIVITY TO LIFE WITH THE
SENSITIVITY OF EVERY LIVING HUMAN BEING (READ THE SPANISH PEOPLE);
HE HAS YET TO EXPAND HIS PERSONALITY AS A NOVELIST TO EMBRACE THE
TRUTHS OF OTHER PEOPLE, EVERYWHERE; HE HAS YET TO DIVE DEEP INTO THE
LIVES OF OTHERS, AND THERE TO FIND HIS OWN." BUT MARK SCHORER
CONTENDED THAT INFOR
WHOM THE BELL TOLLS HEMINGWAY'S
MOTIVE IS TO PORTRAY "A TREMENDOUS SENSE OF MAN'S DIGNITY AND
WORTH, AN URGENT AWARENESS OF THE NECESSITY OF MAN'S FREEDOM, A
NEARLY POETIC REALIZATION OF MAN'S COLLECTIVE VIRTUES.
INDEED, THE INDIVIDUAL VANISHES IN THE POLITICAL WHOLE, BUT VANISHES
PRECISELY TO DEFEND HIS DIGNITY, HIS FREEDOM, HIS VIRTUE. IN SPITE
OF THE OMINOUS PREMIUM WHICH THE TITLE SEEMS TO PLACE ON
INDIVIDUALITY, THE REAL THEME OF THE BOOK IS THE RELATIVE
UNIMPORTANCE OF INDIVIDUALITY AND THE SUPERB IMPORTANCE OF THE
POLITICAL WHOLE." HEMINGWAY'S
DEPICTION OF RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN IS
GENERALLY CONSIDERED TO BE HIS WEAKEST AREA AS A WRITER. LESLIE A.
FIEDLER HAS NOTED THAT HE IS ONLY REALLY COMFORTABLE DEALING WITH
MEN WITHOUT WOMEN. HIS WOMEN CHARACTERS OFTEN SEEM TO BE
ABSTRACTIONS RATHER THAN PORTRAITS OF REAL WOMEN. OFTEN REVIEWERS
HAVE DIVIDED THEM INTO TWO TYPES: THE BITCHES SUCH AS BRETT AND
MARGOT MACOMBER WHO EMASCULATE THE MEN IN THEIR LIVES, AND THE
WISH-PROJECTIONS, THE SWEET, SUBMISSIVE WOMEN SUCH AS CATHERINE AND
MARIA (IN FOR
WHOM THE BELL TOLLS).
ALL OF THE CHARACTERIZATIONS LACK SUBTLETY AND SHADING. THE LOVE
AFFAIR BETWEEN CATHERINE AND FREDERIC IN A
FAREWELL TO ARMS IS
ONLY AN "ABSTRACTION OF LYRIC EMOTION," EDMUND WILSON
COMMENTED. FIEDLER COMPLAINED THAT "IN HIS EARLIER FICTION,
HEMINGWAY'S DESCRIPTIONS OF THE SEXUAL ENCOUNTER ARE INTENTIONALLY
BRUTAL, IN HIS LATER ONES, UNINTENTIONALLY COMIC; FOR IN NO CASE,
CAN HE QUITE SUCCEED IN MAKING HIS FEMALES HUMAN.... IF IN FOR
WHOM THE BELL TOLLS HEMINGWAY
HAS WRITTEN THE MOST ABSURD LOVE SCENE IN THE HISTORY OF THE
AMERICAN NOVEL, THIS IS NOT BECAUSE HE LOST MOMENTARILY HIS SKILL
AND AUTHORITY; IT IS A GIVE-AWAY—A MOMENT WHICH ILLUMINATES THE
WHOLE EROTIC CONTENT OF HIS FICTION." IN
1921, WHEN HEMINGWAY AND HIS FAMILY MOVED TO THE LEFT BANK OF PARIS
(THEN THE LITERATURE, ART, AND MUSIC CAPITAL OF THE WORLD), HE
BECAME ASSOCIATED WITH OTHER AMERICAN EXPATRIATES, INCLUDING F.
SCOTT FITZGERALD, ARCHIBALD
MACLEISH, E.
E. CUMMINGS,
AND JOHN DOS PASSOS. THESE EXPATRIATES AND THE WHOLE GENERATION
WHICH CAME OF AGE IN THE PERIOD BETWEEN THE TWO WORLD WARS CAME TO
BE KNOWN AS THE "LOST GENERATION." FOR HEMINGWAY THE TERM
HAD MORE UNIVERSAL MEANING. IN A
MOVEABLE FEAST HE
WROTE THAT BEING LOST IS PART OF THE HUMAN CONDITION—THAT ALL
GENERATIONS ARE LOST GENERATIONS. HEMINGWAY
ALSO BELIEVED IN THE CYCLICALITY OF THE WORLD. AS
INSCRIPTIONS TO HIS NOVEL THE
SUN ALSO RISES, HE
USED TWO QUOTATIONS: FIRST, GERTRUDE STEIN'S COMMENT, "YOU ARE
ALL A LOST GENERATION"; THEN A VERSE FROM ECCLESIASTES WHICH
BEGINS, "ONE GENERATION PASSETH AWAY, AND ANOTHER GENERATION
COMETH; BUT THE EARTH ABIDETH FOREVER...." THE PARADOX OF
REGENERATION EVOLVING FROM DEATH IS CENTRAL TO HEMINGWAY'S VISION.
THE BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY IS COMFORTING, OF COURSE, AND HEMINGWAY
EVIDENTLY FOUND COMFORT IN PERMANENCE AND ENDURANCE. ACCORDING TO
STEVEN R. PHILLIPS, HEMINGWAY DISCOVERED PERMANENCE IN "THE
SENSE OF IMMORTALITY THAT HE GAINS FROM THE OTHERWISE IMPERMANENT
ART OF THE BULLFIGHT, IN THE FACT THAT THE 'EARTH ABIDETH FOREVER,'
IN THE ETERNAL FLOW OF THE GULF STREAM AND IN THE PERMANENCE OF HIS
OWN WORKS OF ART." HEMINGWAY'S GREATEST DEPICTION OF ENDURANCE
IS IN THE
OLD MAN AND THE SEA IN
WHICH "HE SUCCEEDS IN A MANNER WHICH ALMOST DEFEATS CRITICAL
DESCRIPTION," PHILLIPS CLAIMED. "THE OLD MAN BECOMES THE
SEA AND LIKE THE SEA HE ENDURES. HE IS DYING AS THE YEAR IS DYING.
HE IS FISHING IN SEPTEMBER, THE FALL OF THE YEAR, THE TIME THAT
CORRESPONDS IN THE NATURAL CYCLE TO THE PHASE OF SUNSET AND SUDDEN
DEATH.... YET THE DEATH OF THE OLD MAN WILL NOT BRING AN END TO THE
CYCLE; AS PART OF THE SEA HE WILL CONTINUE TO EXIST." HEMINGWAY
WAS INORDINATELY PROUD OF HIS OWN POWERS OF REJUVENATION,
AND IN A LETTER TO HIS FRIEND ARCHIBALD MACLEISH, HE EXPLAINED THAT
HIS MAXIM WAS: "DANS
LA VIE, IL FAUT (D'ABORD) DURER. "
("IN LIFE, ONE MUST [FIRST OF ALL] ENDURE.") HE HAD
SURVIVED PHYSICAL DISASTERS (INCLUDING TWO NEAR-FATAL PLANE CRASHES
IN AFRICA IN 1954) AND DISASTERS OF CRITICAL RECEPTION TO HIS WORK
( ACROSS
THE RIVER AND INTO THE TREES WAS
ALMOST UNIVERSALLY PANNED). BUT DUE TO HIS GREAT RECUPERATIVE POWERS
HE WAS ABLE TO REBOUND FROM THESE HARDSHIPS. HE MADE A LITERARY
COMEBACK WITH THE PUBLICATION OF THE
OLD MAN AND THE SEA, WHICH
IS CONSIDERED TO BE AMONG HIS FINEST WORKS, AND WON THE PULITZER
PRIZE FOR FICTION IN 1953. IN 1954 HE WAS AWARDED THE NOBEL PRIZE
FOR LITERATURE. BUT THE LAST FEW YEARS OF HIS LIFE WERE MARKED BY
GREAT PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL SUFFERING. HE WAS NO LONGER ABLE TO
WRITE—TO DO THE THING HE LOVED THE MOST. FINALLY HEMINGWAY COULD
ENDURE NO LONGER AND, IN 1961, HE TOOK HIS OWN LIFE. IN
THE 1980S SCRIBNER PUBLISHED TWO ADDITIONAL POSTHUMOUS WORKS—THE
DANGEROUS SUMMER AND THE
GARDEN OF EDEN. WRITTEN
IN 1959 WHILE HEMINGWAY WAS IN SPAIN ON COMMISSION
FOR LIFE MAGAZINE, THE
DANGEROUS SUMMER DESCRIBES
THE INTENSE AND BLOODY COMPETITION BETWEEN TWO PROMINENT
BULLFIGHTERS. THE
GARDEN OF EDEN, A
NOVEL ABOUT NEWLYWEDS WHO EXPERIENCE MARITAL CONFLICT WHILE
TRAVELING THROUGH SPAIN ON THEIR HONEYMOON, WAS BEGUN BY HEMINGWAY
IN THE 1940S AND FINISHED FIFTEEN YEARS LATER. WHILE INTEREST IN
THESE WORKS WAS HIGH, CRITICS JUDGED NEITHER BOOK TO RIVAL THE
THEMATIC AND STYLISTIC ACHIEVEMENTS OF HIS EARLIER WORKS, WHICH HAVE
MADE HEMINGWAY A MAJOR FIGURE IN MODERN AMERICAN LITERATURE. THE
FIFTH OF HEMINGWAY'S POSTHUMOUS PUBLICATIONS,
A SELF-TERMED FICTIONAL MEMOIR TITLED TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT,
WAS RELEASED ON JULY 21, 1999 TO COINCIDE WITH THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY
OF HIS BIRTH. THE BOOK, EDITED BY HEMINGWAY'S MIDDLE SON, PATRICK,
AND PARED DOWN TO HALF THE LENGTH OF THE ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT,
RECOUNTS A KENYAN SAFARI EXCURSION THAT HEMINGWAY TOOK WITH HIS
FOURTH WIFE, MARY, IN 1953. THE STORY CENTERS AROUND MARY'S
PREOCCUPATION WITH KILLING A LION WHO IS THREATENING THE VILLAGERS'
SAFETY, AND THE NARRATOR'S INVOLVEMENT WITH A WOMAN FROM THE WAKAMBA
TRIBE, WHOM HE CALLS HIS "FIANCÉE." MANY
CRITICS EXPRESSED DISAPPOINTMENT OVER TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT FOR
ITS PERIPATETIC
LACK OF VISION, ITS ABDICATION OF INTELLECTUAL INTENT (WHAT NEW
YORK TIMES CRITIC
JAMES WOOD TERMED "A NULLIFICATION OF THOUGHT") AND ITS
TEPID PROSE. KENNETH S. LYNN, WRITING FOR THE NATIONAL
REVIEW,
POINTED OUT THAT "ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S NAME IS ON THE COVER, BUT
THE PUBLICATION OF TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT IS
AN IMPORTANT EVENT IN CELEBRITY CULTURE, NOT IN LITERARY CULTURE.
FOR THE GRIM FACT IS THAT THIS 'FICTIONAL MEMOIR' . . .REFLECTS A
MARVELOUS WRITER'S DISASTROUS LOSS OF TALENT." MANY OF THE
CRITICS POINTED TO HEMINGWAY'S INCREASING PREOCCUPATION WITH THE
MYTH OF HIS OWN MACHISMO AS A CATALYST FOR THE DEVOLUTION OF HIS
WRITING. NEW
YORK TIMES CRITIC
MICHIKO KAKUTANI COMMENTED, "AS IN SO MUCH OF HEMINGWAY'S LATER
WORK, ALL THIS SPINNING OF HIS OWN LEGEND IS REFLECTED IN THE
DETERIORATION OF HIS PROSE. WHAT WAS SPECIAL—AND AT THE TIME,
GALVANIC—ABOUT HIS EARLY WRITING WAS ITS PRECISION AND CONCISION:
HEMINGWAY NOT ONLY KNEW WHAT TO LEAVE OUT, BUT HE ALSO SUCCEEDED IN
TURNING THAT AUSTERITY INTO A MORAL OUTLOOK, A WAY OF LOOKING AT A
WORLD SHATTERED AND REMADE BY WORLD WAR I. HIS EARLY WORK HAD A
CLEAN, HARD OBJECTIVITY: IT DID NOT ENGAGE IN MEANINGLESS
ABSTRACTIONS; IT TRIED TO SHOW, NOT TELL." TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT ALSO
INFLAMED CLASSIC CRITICAL DEBATE OVER THE TRUE OWNERSHIP OF
AUTHORIAL INTENTION. WHILE HEMINGWAY'S PHYSICAL AND MENTAL
DETERIORATION, TOWARD THE END OF HIS LIFE, RENDERED HIS FINAL WISHES
FOR UNPUBLISHED WORKS UNCLEAR, MANY CRITICS HAVE OBJECTED TO THE
POSTHUMOUS "FRANCHISE" OF HIS DEEPEST FAILURES, NOVELS
THAT HE, HIMSELF, ABANDONED. JAMES WOOD OFFERED THE OBSERVATION
THAT TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT'S
LACK OF SUBSTANCE MAY SERVE "AS A WARNING TO LET HEMINGWAY BE,
BOTH AS A LITERARY ESTATE AND AS A LITERARY INFLUENCE." THERE
IS EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, THAT THE LITERARY STORM THE BOOK STIRRED WOULD
NOT HAVE BOTHERED HEMINGWAY MUCH. AS TOM JENKS POINTED OUT IN A
REVIEW FOR HARPER'S,
"HEMINGWAY'S OWN BELIEF WAS THAT IN A WRITER'S LIFETIME HIS
REPUTATION DEPENDED ON THE QUANTITY AND MEDIAN OF HIS WORK, BUT THAT
AFTER HIS DEATH HE WOULD BE REMEMBERED ONLY FOR HIS BEST." IF
THIS IS TRUE, THEN, AS ONE PUBLISHERS
WEEKLY REVIEWER
OPINED, PERHAPS TRUE
AT FIRST LIGHT WILL
"INSPIRE NEW READERS TO DELVE INTO HEMINGWAY'S TRUE
LEGACY." IN
2002, CUBAN AND AMERICAN OFFICIALS REACHED AN AGREEMENT THAT PERMITS
U.S. SCHOLARS ACCESS TO HEMINGWAY'S PAPERS THAT HAVE REMAINED IN HIS
HAVANA HOME SINCE THE AUTHOR'S DEATH IN 1961. THE COLLECTION
CONTAINS 3,000 PHOTOGRAPHS, 9,000 BOOKS, AND 3,000 LETTERS, AND WILL
BE AVAILABLE ON MICROFILM AT THE JOHN F. KENNEDY LIBRARY IN BOSTON,
MASSACHUSETTS. EFFORTS TO GAIN ACCESS TO THE COLLECTION WERE LED BY
JENNY PHILLIPS, THE GRANDDAUGHTER OF MAXWELL PERKINS, HEMINGWAY'S
LONG-TIME EDITOR.
CAREER
WRITER,
1917-61. KANSAS
CITY STAR, KANSAS
CITY, MO, CUB REPORTER, 1917-18; AMBULANCE DRIVER FOR RED CROSS
AMBULANCE CORPS IN ITALY, 1918-19; CO-OPERATIVE
COMMONWEALTH, CHICAGO,
WRITER, 1920-21; TORONTO
STAR,TORONTO,
ONTARIO, COVERED GRECO-TURKISH WAR, 1920, EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENT,
1921-24; COVERED SPANISH CIVIL WAR FOR NORTH AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
ALLIANCE, 1937-38; WAR CORRESPONDENT IN CHINA, 1941; WAR
CORRESPONDENT IN EUROPE, 1944-45.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
NOVELS
- THE TORRENTS OF SPRING: A ROMANTIC NOVEL IN HONOR OF THE PASSING OF A GREAT RACE(PARODY), SCRIBNER, 1926, PUBLISHED WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY DAVID GARNETT, J. CAPE, 1964, REPRINTED, SCRIBNER, 1972.
- THE SUN ALSO RISES, SCRIBNER, 1926, PUBLISHED WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY HENRY SEIDEL CANBY, MODERN LIBRARY, 1930, REPRINTED, SCRIBNER, 1969 (PUBLISHED IN ENGLAND AS FIESTA,J. CAPE, 1959).
- A FAREWELL TO ARMS,SCRIBNER, 1929, PUBLISHED WITH NEW INTRODUCTIONS BY FORD MADOX FORD, MODERN LIBRARY, 1932, ROBERT PENN WARREN, SCRIBNER, 1949, JOHN C. SCHWEITZER, SCRIBNER, 1967.
- TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT,SCRIBNER, 1937, J. CAPE, 1970.
- FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS,SCRIBNER, 1940, PUBLISHED WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY SINCLAIR LEWIS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1942, REPRINTED, SCRIBNER, 1960.
- ACROSS THE RIVER AND INTO THE TREES,SCRIBNER, 1950, REPRINTED, PENGUIN WITH J. CAPE, 1966.
- THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA,SCRIBNER 1952.
- ISLANDS IN THE STREAM,SCRIBNER, 1970.
- THE GARDEN OF EDEN,SCRIBNER, 1986.
- PATRICK HEMINGWAY, EDITOR, TRUE AT FIRST LIGHT: A FICTIONAL MEMOIR, SIMON & SCHUSTER, 1999; FIRST UNABRIDGED VERSION PUBLISHED AS UNDER KILIMANJARO, KENT STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS (KENT, OH), 2005. SHORT STORIES, EXCEPT AS INDICATED
- THREE STORIES & TEN POEMS,CONTACT (PARIS), 1923.
- IN OUR TIME,BONI & LIVERIGHT, 1925, PUBLISHED WITH ADDITIONAL MATERIAL AND NEW INTRO-DUC-ION BY EDMUND WILSON, SCRIBNER, 1930, REPRINTED, BRUCCOLI, 1977 (ALSO SEE BELOW).
- MEN WITHOUT WOMEN,SCRIBNER, 1927.
- WINNER TAKE NOTHING,SCRIBNER, 1933.
- FIFTH COLUMN AND THE FIRST FORTY-NINE STORIES (STORIES AND A PLAY), SCRIBNER, 1938, STORIES PUBLISHED SEPARATELY AS FIRST FORTY-NINE STORIES, J. CAPE, 1962, PLAY PUBLISHED SEPARATELY AS THE FIFTH COLUMN: A PLAY IN THREE ACTS,SCRIBNER, 1940, J. CAPE, 1968 (ALSO SEE BELOW).
- THE SHORT STORIES OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY,SCRIBNER, 1938.
- THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO AND OTHER STORIES,SCRIBNER, 1961.
- THE SHORT HAPPY LIFE OF FRANCIS MACOMBER AND OTHER STORIES,PENGUIN, 1963.
- HEMINGWAY'S AFRICAN STORIES: THE STORIES, THEIR SOURCES, THEIR CRITICS,COMPILED BY JOHN M. HOWELL, SCRIBNER, 1969.
- THE NICK ADAMS STORIES,PREFACE BY PHILIP YOUNG, SCRIBNER, 1972.
- (CONTRIBUTOR) PETER GRIFFIN, ALONG WITH YOUTH (BIOGRAPHY THAT INCLUDES FIVE PREVIOUSLY UNPUBLISHED SHORT STORIES: CROSSROADS, THE MERCENARIES, THE ASH-HEEL'S TENDON, THE CURRENT, AND PORTRAIT OF THE IDEALIST IN LOVE), OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1985.
- THE COMPLETE SHORT STORIES OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY: THE FINCA VIGIA EDITION, SCRIBNER, 1987.
OTHER
- IN OUR TIME(MINIATURE SKETCHES), THREE MOUNTAIN PRESS (PARIS), 1924 (ALSO SEE ABOVE).
- TODAY IS FRIDAY(PAMPHLET), AS STABLE PUBLICATIONS (ENGLEWOOD, N.J.), 1926.
- DEATH IN THE AFTERNOON(NONFICTION), SCRIBNER, 1932.
- GOD REST YOU MERRY, GENTLEMEN,HOUSE OF BOOKS, 1933.
- GREEN HILLS OF AFRICA(NONFICTION), SCRIBNER, 1935, REPRINTED, PENGUIN WITH J. CAPE, 1966.
- THE SPANISH EARTH(COMMENTARY AND FILM NARRATION), INTRODUCTION BY JASPER WOOD, J. B. SAVAGE (CLEVELAND, OHIO), 1938.
- THE SPANISH WAR(MONOGRAPH), FACT, 1938.
- (EDITOR AND AUTHOR OF INTRODUCTION) MEN AT WAR: THE BEST WAR STORIES OF ALL TIME (BASED ON A PLAN BY WILLIAM KOZLENKO), CROWN, 1942.
- VOYAGE TO VICTORY,CROWELL-COLLIER, 1944.
- THE SECRET AGENT'S BADGE OF COURAGE,BELMONT BOOKS, 1954.
- TWO CHRISTMAS TALES,HART PRESS, 1959.
- A MOVEABLE FEAST(REMINISCENCES), SCRIBNER, 1964.
- COLLECTED POEMS,HASKELL, 1970.
- THE COLLECTED POEMS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY,GORDON PRESS, 1972.
- ERNEST HEMINGWAY: EIGHTY-EIGHT POEMS,HARCOURT, 1979.
- ERNEST HEMINGWAY, SELECTED LETTERS, 1917-1961,SCRIBNER, 1981.
- COMPLETE POEMS,EDITED BY NICHOLAS GEROGIANNIS, UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS, 1983.
- HEMINGWAY ON WRITING,SCRIBNER, 1984.
- THE DANGEROUS SUMMER(NONFICTION), INTRODUCTION BY JAMES A. MICHENER, SCRIBNER, 1985.
- CONVERSATIONS WITH ERNEST HEMINGWAY,UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI, 1986.
- HEMINGWAY AT OAK PARK HIGH: THE HIGH SCHOOL WRITINGS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY, 1916-1917ALPINE GUILD, 1993.
- MATTHEW BRUCCOLI, EDITOR, THE ONLY THING THAT COUNTS: THE ERNEST HEMINGWAY/MAXWELL PERKINS CORRESPONDENCE, 1925-1947, SCRIBNER, 1996.
OMNIBUS
VOLUMES
- THE PORTABLE HEMINGWAY (CONTAINS THE SUN ALSO RISES, A FAREWELL TO ARMS, TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT, FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS,AND SHORT STORIES), EDITED BY MALCOLM COWLEY, VIKING, 1944.
- THE ESSENTIAL HEMINGWAY(CONTAINS ONE NOVEL, NOVEL EXTRACTS, AND TWENTY-THREE SHORT STORIES), J. CAPE, 1947, REPRINTED, 1964.
- THE HEMINGWAY READER,EDITED WITH FOREWORD BY CHARLES POORE, SCRIBNER, 1953.
- THREE NOVELS: THE SUN ALSO RISES, A FAREWELL TO ARMS, AND THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA, EACH WITH SEPARATE INTRODUCTIONS BY MALCOLM COWLEY, ROBERT PENN WARREN, AND CARLOS BAKER, RESPECTIVELY, SCRIBNER, 1962.
- THE WILD YEARS(COLLECTION OF JOURNALISM), EDITED BY GENE Z. HANRAHAN, DELL, 1962.
- BY-LINE, ERNEST HEMINGWAY: SELECTED ARTICLES AND DISPATCHES OF FOUR DECADES,EDITED BY WILLIAM WHITE, SCRIBNER, 1967.
- FIFTH COLUMN AND FOUR STORIES OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR,SCRIBNER, 1969 (ALSO SEE ABOVE).
- ERNEST HEMINGWAY, CUB REPORTER: KANSAS CITY STAR STORIES,EDITED BY MATTHEW J. BRUCCOLI, UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH PRESS, 1970.
- ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S APPRENTICESHIP: OAK PARK, 1916-1917,EDITED BY BRUCCOLI, BRUCCOLI CLARK NCR MICROCARD EDITIONS, 1971.
- THE ENDURING HEMINGWAY: AN ANTHOLOGY OF A LIFETIME IN LITERATURE,EDITED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER, JR., SCRIBNER, 1974.
- DATELINE—TORONTO: HEMINGWAY'S COMPLETE TORONTO STAR DISPATCHES,EDITED BY WHITE, SCRIBNER, 1985.
- FURTHER READING
BOOKS
- ALDRIDGE, JOHN W., TIME TO MURDER AND CREATE: THE CONTEMPORARY NOVEL IN CRISIS,MCKAY, 1966.
- ALLEN, WALTER, THE MODERN NOVEL,DUTTON, 1964.
- ASTRO, RICHARD AND JACKSON J. BENSON, EDITORS, HEMINGWAY IN OUR TIME, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1974.
- BAKER, CARLOS, HEMINGWAY: THE WRITER AS ARTIST,PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1956.
- BAKER, ERNEST HEMINGWAY: A LIFE STORY,SCRIBNER, 1969.
- BAKER, EDITOR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY: CRITIQUES OF FOUR MAJOR NOVELS,SCRIBNER, 1962.
- BALDWIN, KENNETH H. AND DAVID K. KIRBY, EDITORS, INDIVIDUAL AND COMMUNITY: VARIATIONS ON A THEME IN AMERICAN FICTION,DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1975.
- BALDWIN, MARC D., READING THE SUN ALSO RISES: HEMINGWAY'S POLITICAL UNCONSCIOUS,P. LANG (NEW YORK CITY), 1996.
- BARRETT, WILLIAM, TIME OF NEED: FORMS OF IMAGINATION IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY,HARPER, 1972.
- BELLAVANCE-JOHNSON, MARSHA, ERNEST HEMINGWAY IN IDAHO: A GUIDE,COMPUTER LAB., 1997.
- BENSON, JACKSON J., EDITOR, THE SHORT STORIES OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY: CRITICAL ESSAYS,DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1975.
- BLOOM, HAROLD, EDITOR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S A FAREWELL TO ARMS,CHELSEA HOUSE (NEW YORK CITY), 1995.
- BLOOM, EDITOR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA,CHELSEA HOUSE (NEW YORK CITY), 1995.
- BLOOM, EDITOR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S THE SUN ALSO RISES,CHELSEA HOUSE (NEW YORK CITY), 1995.
- BRUCCOLI, MATTHEW J. AND C. E. FRAZER CLARK, JR., EDITORS, FITZGERALD-HEMINGWAY ANNUAL,BRUCCOLI CLARK BOOKS, 1969-76, GALE, 1977.
- BRUCCOLI, FITZGERALD AND HEMINGWAY: A DANGEROUS FRIENDSHIP,CARROLL & GRAF (NEW YORK CITY), 1994.
- BURGESS, ANTHONY, URGENT COPY: LITERARY STUDIES,NORTON, 1968.
- BURGESS, THE NOVEL NOW: A GUIDE TO CONTEMPORARY FICTION,NORTON, 1967.
- BURGESS, ANTHONY, ERNEST HEMINGWAY AND HIS WORLD,SCRIBNER, 1978.
- BURRILL, WILLIAM, HEMINGWAY: THE TORONTO YEARS,DOUBLEDAY (TORONTO), 1994.
- BURWELL, ROSE MARIE, HEMINGWAY: THE POSTWAR YEARS AND THE POSTHUMOUS NOVELS,CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS (NEW YORK CITY), 1996.
- CASTILLO-PUCHE, JOSE L., HEMINGWAY IN SPAIN,DOUBLEDAY, 1974.
- COMLEY, NANCY R., HEMINGWAY'S GENDERS: REREADING THE HEMINGWAY TEXT, YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS (NEW HAVEN), 1994.
- CONCISE DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN LITERARY BIOGRAPHY: THE TWENTIES, 1917-1929,GALE, 1989.
- CONTEMPORARY LITERARY CRITICISM,GALE, VOLUME 1, 1973, VOLUME 3, 1975, VOLUME 6, 1976, VOLUME 8, 1978, VOLUME 13, 1980, VOLUME 19, 1981, VOLUME 30, 1984, VOLUME 34, 1985, VOLUME 39, 1986, VOLUME 41, 1987, VOLUME 44, 1987, VOLUME 50, 1988.
- COWLEY, MALCOLM, A SECOND FLOWERING: WORKS AND DAYS OF THE LOST GENERATION, VIKING, 1973.
- DE KOSTER, KATIE, READINGS ON ERNEST HEMINGWAY,GREENHAVEN PRESS, 1997.
- DOLAN, MARC, MODERN LIVES: A CULTURAL RE-READING OF THE "LOST GENERATION," PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESS (WEST LAFAYETTE, IN), 1996.
- DONALDSON, SCOTT, BY FORCE OF WILL: THE LIFE IN ART AND ART IN THE LIFE OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY,VIKING, 1977.
- DONALDSON, EDITOR, THE CAMBRIDGE COMPANION TO HEMINGWAY,CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS (NEW YORK CITY), 1996.
- EBY, CARL P., HEMINGWAY'S FETISHISM: PSYCHOANALYSIS AND THE MIRROR OF MANHOOD,STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESS, 1998.
- FIEDLER, LESLIE A., LOVE AND DEATH IN THE AMERICAN NOVEL,CRITERION, 1960.
- FIEDLER, WAITING FOR THE END,STEIN & DAY, 1964.
- FLEMING, ROBERT E., THE FACE IN THE MIRROR: HEMINGWAY'S WRITERS,UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS (TUSCALOOSA), 1994.
- FROHOCK, W. M., THE NOVEL OF VIOLENCE IN AMERICA,SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1957.
- GEISMAN, MAXWELL, AMERICAN MODERNS: FROM REBELLION TO CONFORMITY,HILL & WANG, 1958.
- GREBSTEIN, SHELDON N., HEMINGWAY'S CRAFT,SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1973.
- GRIFFIN, PETER, ALONG WITH YOUTH,OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1985.
- GURKO, LEO, ERNEST HEMINGWAY AND THE PURSUIT OF HEROISM,CROWELL, 1968.
- HARDY, RICHARD E. AND JOHN G. CULL, HEMINGWAY: A PSYCHOLOGICAL PORTRAIT, BANNER BOOKS, 1977.
- HASSAN, IHAB, THE DISMEMBERMENT OF ORPHEUS: TOWARD A POSTMODERN LITERATURE, OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1971.
- HEMINGWAY, ERNEST, A MOVEABLE FEAST,SCRIBNER, 1964.
- HEMINGWAY, DEATH IN THE AFTERNOON,SCRIBNER, 1932.
- HEMINGWAY, GREGORY H., PAPA: A PERSONAL MEMOIR,HOUGHTON, 1976.
- HEMINGWAY, LEICESTER, MY BROTHER, ERNEST HEMINGWAY,3RD EDITION, PINEAPPLE PRESS (SARASOTA, FL), 1996.
- HEMINGWAY, MARY WELSH, HOW IT WAS,KNOPF, 1976.
- HOFFMAN, FREDERICK J., THE MODERN NOVEL IN AMERICA,REGNERY, REVISED EDITION, 1963.
- HOTCHNER, A. E., PAPA HEMINGWAY: A PERSONAL MEMOIR,BANTAM, 1966.
- HOWE, IRVING, A WORLD MORE ATTRACTIVE: A VIEW OF MODERN LITERATURE AND POLITICS,HORIZON PRESS, 1963.
- HUNTER-GILLESPIE, CONNIE, ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S THE SUN ALSO RISES,ILLUSTRATED BY RICHARD FORTUNATO, RESEARCH AND EDUCATION ASSOCIATION (PISCATAWAY, NJ), 1996.
- JOSEPHS, ALLEN, FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS: ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY,MACMILLAN INTERNATIONAL (NEW YORK CITY), 1994.
- KAZIN, ALFRED, BRIGHT BOOK OF LIFE: AMERICAN NOVELISTS AND STORYTELLERS FROM HEMINGWAY TO MAILER,LITTLE, BROWN, 1973.
- KENNEDY, J. GERALD, AND JACKSON R. BRYER, FRENCH CONNECTIONS: HEMINGWAY AND FITZGERALD ABROAD,ST. MARTIN'S PRESS, 1998.
- LEFF, LEONARD J., HEMINGWAY AND HIS CONSPIRATORS: HOLLYWOOD SCRIBNERS AND THE MAKING OF AMERICAN CELEBRITY CULTURE,ROWMAN AND LITTLEFIELD, 1997.
- LYNN, KENNETH SCHUYLER, HEMINGWAY,HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS (CAMBRIDGE), 1995.
- MADDEN, DAVID, EDITOR, TOUGH GUY WRITERS OF THE THIRTIES,SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1968.
- MANDEL, MIRIAM B., READING HEMINGWAY: THE FACTS IN THE FICTIONS,SCARECROW PRESS (METUCHEN, NJ), 1995.
- MCDANIEL, MELISSA, ERNEST HEMINGWAY,CHELSEA HOUSE (NEW YORK CITY), 1996.
- MELLOW, JAMES R., HEMINGWAY: A LIFE WITHOUT CONSEQUENCES,ADDISON-WESLEY (READING, MA), 1994.
- MONTEIRO, GEORGE, CRITICAL ESSAYS ON ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S FAREWELL TO ARMS,MACMILLAN INTERNATIONAL (NEW YORK CITY), 1994.
- MORRIS, WRIGHT, THE TERRITORY AHEAD: CRITICAL INTERPRETATIONS IN AMERICAN LITERATURE,HARCOURT, 1958.
- NAGEL, JEMS, EDITOR, CRITICAL ESSAYS ON ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S THE SUN ALSO RISES,G. K. HALL (NEW YORK CITY), 1995.
- NAGEL, EDITOR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY: THE OAK PARK LEGACY,UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS (TUSCALOOSA), 1996.
- NAHAL, CHAMAN, THE NARRATIVE PATTERN IN ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S FICTION, FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON, 1971.
- PRIESTLEY, J. B., LITERATURE AND WESTERN MAN,HARPER, 1960.
- RAHV, PHILIP, THE MYTH AND THE POWERHOUSE,FARRAR, STRAUS, 1965.
- REYNOLDS, MICHAEL S., HEMINGWAY'S FIRST WAR: THE MAKING OF "A FAREWELL TO ARMS,"PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1976.
- REYNOLDS, MICHAEL, HEMINGWAY: THE AMERICAN HOMECOMING,BLACKWELL PUBLISHERS, 1992.
- REYNOLDS, HEMINGWAY,NORTON, 1997.
- REYNOLDS, HEMINGWAY: THE 1930S,NORTON, 1997.
- REYNOLDS, THE YOUNG HEMINGWAY,NORTON, 1998.
- REYNOLDS, HEMINGWAY: THE PARIS YEARS,NORTON, 1999.
- REYNOLDS, HEMINGWAY: THE FINAL YEARS,NORTON, 1999.
- REYNOLDS, PICTURING HEMINGWAY: A WRITER IN HIS TIME,YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1999.
- REYNOLDS, HEMINGWAY: THE HOMECOMING,NORTON, 1999.
- ROGAL, SAMUEL J., FOR WHOM THE DINNER BELL TOLLS: THE ROLE AND FUNCTION OF FOOD AND DRINK IN THE PROSE OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY,INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARS PUBLICATIONS (SAN FRANCISCO), 1996.
- ROSEN, KENNETH MARK, EDITOR, HEMINGWAY REPOSSESSED,PRAEGER (WESTPORT, CT), 1994.
- ROVIT, EARL R., ERNEST HEMINGWAY,TWAYNE, 1963.
- SEWARD, WILLIAM, MY FRIEND ERNEST HEMINGWAY,A. S. BARNES, 1969.
- SMITH, PAUL, ED., NEW ESSAYS ON HEMINGWAY'S SHORT FICTION,CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1998.
- STEPHENS, ROBERT O., HEMINGWAY'S NONFICTION: THE PUBLIC VOICE,UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS, 1968.
- SZENES, DOMINIQUE, ERNEST HEMINGWAY,PARK AVENUE (PARIS), 1994.
- TESSITORE, JOHN, THE HUNT AND THE FEAST: A LIFE OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY, FRANKLIN WATTS (NEW YORK CITY), 1996.
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- WALDHORN, ARTHUR, ERNEST HEMINGWAY,MCGRAW, 1973.
- WESTBROOK, MAX, EDITOR, THE MODERN AMERICAN NOVEL: ESSAYS IN CRITICISM, RANDOM HOUSE, 1966.
- WYLDER, DELBERT E., HEMINGWAY'S HEROES,UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO PRESS, 1969.
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- YOUNG, PHILIP, ERNEST HEMINGWAY,UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS, REVISED EDITION, 1965.
- YOUNG, ERNEST HEMINGWAY: A RECONSIDERATION, PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2ND EDITION, 1966.
PERIODICALS
- AMERICAN SCHOLAR,SUMMER, 1974.
- ARIZONA QUARTERLY,SPRING, 1973.
- BOOKLIST,APRIL 15, 1999, P. 1452.
- CHICAGO TRIBUNE,JULY 17, 1986.
- CHICAGO TRIBUNE BOOK WORLD,OCTOBER 13, 1985; MAY 4, 1986; AUGUST 24, 1986.
- DENVER POST,JULY 18, 1999.
- DETROIT NEWS,JUNE 9, 1985.
- FORBES,SEPTEMBER 26, 1994.
- GEORGIA REVIEW,SUMMER, 1977.
- GLOBE AND MAIL(TORONTO), NOVEMBER 30, 1985; MAY 31, 1986.
- HARPER'SMAY, 1999, P. 53.
- KENYON REVIEW,WINTER, 1941.
- LIBRARY JOURNAL,MAY 1, 1999, P. 79; JUNE 15, 1999, P. 113.
- LOS ANGELES TIMES,MAY 22, 1986; JANUARY 25, 1987.
- LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK REVIEW,JUNE 23, 1985.
- MEDITERRANEAN REVIEW,SPRING, 1971.
- MIDWEST QUARTERLY,SPRING, 1976.
- MODERN FICTION STUDIES,SUMMER, 1975.
- NATION,JUNE 14, 1999, P. 24.
- NATIONAL REVIEW,NOVEMBER 7, 1994, P. 80; JUNE 28, 1999, P. 50.
- NEW MASSES,NOVEMBER 5, 1940.
- NEWSWEEK,MAY 19, 1986; APRIL 12, 1999, P. 70.
- NEW YORKER,MAY 13, 1950.
- NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS,DECEMBER 30, 1971.
- NEW YORK TIMES,JUNE 1, 1985; MAY 21, 1986; JULY 24, 1989; AUGUST 17, 1989; JUNE 22, 1999; JULY 11, 1999.
- NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW,JUNE 9, 1985; MAY 18, 1986.
- NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE,AUGUST 18, 1985.
- OBSERVER,FEBRUARY 8, 1987.
- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY,JANUARY 11, 1985; MAY 10, 1999, P. 53.
- SOUTHWEST REVIEW,WINTER, 1976.
- TIME,MAY 26, 1986; JULY 5, 1999, P. 76+.
- TIMES(LONDON), JULY 18, 1985; AUGUST 1, 1986; FEBRUARY 12, 1989.
- WASHINGTON POST,JULY 29, 1987.
- WASHINGTON POST BOOK WORLD,JUNE 30, 1985; NOVEMBER 3, 1985; JUNE 1, 1986.
- YALE REVIEW, SPRING, 1969.
POEMS, ARTICLES, & MORE
DISCOVER
THIS POET’S CONTEXT AND RELATED POETRY, ARTICLES, AND MEDIA.
POEMS
BY ERNEST M. HEMINGWAY
End - 22.04.2015.
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