The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories by Ernest Hemingway

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: October 1995
  • 160pp
  • Sales Rank: 39,857
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 1995
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 160pp
    • Sales Rank: 39,857
    • Lexile: 820L 

    Synopsis

    The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories contains ten of Hemingway's most acclaimed and popular works of short fiction.

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    Biography

    The winner of the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature, Ernest Hemingway is one of the true giants of modern American literature. Hemingway's punchy, pared-down style and ability to zero in on the perfect characterizing detail of a person or scene has influenced every serious novelist of the second half of the 20th century. Everyone reads him at one time or another.

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    Customer Reviews

    Depressing but worth readingby Anonymous

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    April 16, 2005: I had never read anything by Hemingway until a friend loaned me this collection of ten short stories. Although I can't comment on Hemingway's entire body of work, in these stories he seems to find disappointment in his major characters. His characters are all interesting, flawed human beings, with the exception of the women, whom he seems to revere and loathe at the same time. The men are all consumed with manly pursuits like gambling, hunting, boxing and warfare. Hemingway created vivid scenes with short bursts of dialogue and long run-on sentences jam-packed with prepositional phrases. Like medicine, I knew these stories were 'good for me' in a way the next best-seller never will be, yet the acidic tang and sticky-sweet syrup taste lingered long after.

    Disappointed by 'one of the greats'by Anonymous

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    February 08, 2005: I am probably one of the few people who find Hemingway's writing a disappointment. I felt this way the first time I read Faulkner, too. I asked myself 'What is he trying to say?' or 'Why am I reading this if it's not meaningful or enjoyable to me?' I persist through books I am not liking because I felt like this during the first hundred pages of 'A Tale of Two Cities' and that ended up being one of my favorite books. Not this book, however. These stories felt to me like Hemingway was purging himself of something and not trying to tell me a story. Some literature I guess can be like that but not the kind I like to read.


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