Features selections from the author's first book of short stories, In Our Time, as well as excerpts from A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and The Fifth Column, in a collection of war writings edited by his grandson and featuring a personal foreword by his surviving son. 75,000 first printing.
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Born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1899, Ernest Hemingway served in the Red Cross during World War I as an ambulance driver and was severely wounded in Italy. He moved to Paris in 1921, devoted himself to writing fiction, and soon became part of the expatriate community, along with Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, and Ford Madox Ford. He revolutionized American writing with his short, declarative sentences and terse prose. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954, and his classic novella The Old Man and the Sea won the Pulitzer Prize in 1953. Known for his larger-than-life personality and his passions for bullfighting, fishing, and big-game hunting, he died in Ketchum, Idaho, on July 2, 1961.
Edited by his grandson, Sean, this collection of Hemingway's best, and sometimes most obscure, short stories, novel excerpts, and war correspondence chronologically traces the author's account of modern war and its aftermath through the first half of the 20th century. The book includes portions of his popular war novels, A Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls, and his less acclaimed Across the River and Into the Trees, and only play, The Fifth Column, interspersed with short stories. The editor has gathered, among others, pieces from his grandfather's first published collection of short stories, In Our Time, as well as some of his first dilettante-ish attempts at writing, like "The Mercenaries," which was written in 1919 but only appeared in 1985 in the New York Times Magazine. Although the collection emphasizes fiction, the combat-hardened author's preferred medium, it also comprises decades of war correspondence, like the classic 1937 dispatch from Madrid, "A New Kind of War," a 1922 exclusive interview with Mussolini in "Fascist Party Half Million" and a reflection on growing tensions in the Pacific from a 1941 trip to Japan and China in "Russo-Japanese Pact." The foreword by Hemingway's son, Patrick, is full of anecdotal memories of the author, such as his unhappy lunch with FDR, during which the President lectured the recently returned veteran on the Spanish Civil War, and his collaboration with Naval intelligence to arrest German agents disembarking in Cuba during WWII. Sean Hemingway's introduction provides a biographical context for the pieces and additional nuggets of personal correspondence. In one letter, Hemingway explains how he tries to write a balanced portrayal of war, "taking it slowly and honestly and examining it from many ways." This collection illuminates many sides of Hemingway's thoughts on conflict, even if the reader may come no closer to understanding war itself.
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