The Goddamn Manful Hemingway Thread

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sun also rises wasn't as absorbing as i wanted it to be, though i still found it a fairly quick and enjoyable read. i'll get to the other novels before long.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 26 February 2009 05:29 (fifteen years ago) link

it's funny that people complain about his female characters being thinly sketched and caricatured -- i think his male characters are like that too! i don't think characterization was his strong point.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 26 February 2009 05:30 (fifteen years ago) link

idk i mean i think the dudes who inherited the macho ticker tape mantel got really good at deft hypersubtle characterization

its gotta be HOOSy para steen (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Thursday, 26 February 2009 06:02 (fifteen years ago) link

I read Sun Also Rises last month for the first time and I liked it, but not the way I loved some of his other stuff. My favourites are Moveable Feast, Death in the Afternoon and some of the Nick Adams stories, but I haven't read a lot more than that, I have to admit. At his best I find his style so lovely, just very hypnotic and calming.

franny glass, Thursday, 26 February 2009 17:22 (fifteen years ago) link

A Farewell To Arms is unbelievable. I remember not liking it when I read it becaues it was so unconventional and spontaneously tragic. Nowadays that's what I like most about it.
I read Green Hills of Africa because it was name-dropped in On The Road ("It's Hemingway's best"). It was good. I mean, the first half is awesome; Hemingway gets loaded, starts talking shit about literature, kills a rhinoceros(!). The second half is really hunting-heavy though and kind of a slog. That said I highly recommend it. This is going to sound lame but it was really relaxing.

samosa gibreel, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 00:27 (fifteen years ago) link

He's a short story writer with novelistic ambitions, and as such only hit it twice: The Sun Also Rises and (barely) A Farewell to Arms. I'm really fond of the posthumous The Garden of Eden, in which he exposes the polymorphous perversity that served as subtext for so many years.

The Screaming Lobster of Challops (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 March 2009 00:31 (fifteen years ago) link

Papa's got a brand new dress.

James Morrison, Tuesday, 3 March 2009 00:58 (fifteen years ago) link

one year passes...

bang

Jermaine Jenason (darraghmac), Friday, 26 March 2010 14:35 (fourteen years ago) link

"one book by me about the sea"

Mr. Que, Friday, 26 March 2010 14:35 (fourteen years ago) link

one year passes...

I was a young teen when Hemingway killed himself. He was my hero and I felt betrayed. I never read him again. All these years and the betrayal is still fresh.

― jerry myers, Sunday, 4 June 2006 08:53 (5 years ago)

Tears Henry shed for poor old Hemingway,
Hemingway in despair, Hemingway at the end,
the end of Hemingway,
tears in a diningroom in Indiana
and that was years ago, before his marriage say,
God to him no worse luck send.

Save us from shotguns & fathers' suicides.
It all depends on who you're the father
of
if you want to kill yourself --
a bad example, murder of oneself,
the final death, in a paroxysm, of love
for which good mercy hides?

A girl at the door: 'A few coppers pray'
But to return, to return to Hemingway
that cruel & gifted man.
Mercy! my father; do not pull the trigger
or all my life I'll suffer from your anger
killing what you began.

-- Berryman, D.S. #235

alimosina, Tuesday, 7 June 2011 18:51 (twelve years ago) link

one year passes...

i'm nearing the end of For Whom the Bell Tolls (having read the big collection of his short stories repeatedly in high school, and Old Man and the Sea, and that's it, otherwise), and I guess it's long fallen out of fashion to love him, but I do. There's a departure near the end of FWtBT, starting with "Then after your father had shot himself with this pistol, and you'd come home from school", and continuing on a paragraph later with a section about taking that pistol and riding a horse out to a lake that was supposedly 800 feet deep and dropping it in, watching it sink. Just killed me. Probably from having a few friends who had killed themselves, long ago, + 3/4 fifth of Maker's Mark, but i just hate how you can no longer be like "FUCK YEAH HEMINGWAY" anymore, you're supposed to couch it in reservations

you're all going to hello (Z S), Sunday, 29 July 2012 03:45 (eleven years ago) link

Yes yes, the PC police can be so wearying.

It's odd coming to him as a comics fan, as one of his major impacts there has been Dave Sim's loving encomium over about a year, featuring Ham Ernestway and his shrewish wife Mary, who eventually pushes him towards suicide. On the one hand he's tainted by association with Sim during the height of his misogyny, on the other it's assumed that the caricature has surely exaggerated him. And then it hasn't.

Is this the longest all-boys thread on ILB / on ILX? Certainly if you'd asked me what the longest all-boys thread on ILB was, I would have come up with Hemingway after a while.

Regarding his style: there's a parody in a 1932 New Yorker, bearing the subtitle "(With the usual apologies to Ernest Hemingway, who must be pretty sick of this sort of thing)"

Andrew Farrell, Sunday, 29 July 2012 11:27 (eleven years ago) link

I am a girl and I adore Hemingway. His real life and goddam manfulness doesn't change the fact that I love the sentences he wrote. Reading him is a weirdly beautiful experience for me.

Sun Also Rises is my least favourite, although I haven't read everything or even most of his stuff. I read Farewell to Arms earlier this year, it was pretty devastating. The short stories were my first intro to him, and might be my favourite.

franny glass, Tuesday, 31 July 2012 02:15 (eleven years ago) link

nine months pass...

http://www.tc.umn.edu/~sunny/maestro.pdf

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Monday, 27 May 2013 00:06 (ten years ago) link

thought thread title said mariel hemingway, was confused and excited that she would have her own thread

turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 27 May 2013 00:12 (ten years ago) link

Bibliography (edit)

Mariel Hemingway is the author of:
Hemingway, Mariel (2002). Finding My Balance: A Memoir (1st ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-3807-9.
Hemingway, Mariel (2006). Mariel Hemingway's Healthy Living from the Inside Out: Every Woman's Guide to Real Beauty, Renewed Energy, and a Radiant Life (1st ed.). HarperOne. ISBN 978-0-06-089039-1.
Hemingway, Mariel (2009). MARIEL'S KITCHEN Simple Ingredients for a Delicious and Satisfying Life (1st ed.). HarperOne. ISBN 978-0-06-164987-5.

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Monday, 27 May 2013 13:42 (ten years ago) link

i mean we could try i guess

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Monday, 27 May 2013 13:42 (ten years ago) link

I like that list of books in the Esquire article -- it's not the same as the earlier handwritten list. I wonder if Mariel has read them all.

Hemingway sounds nasty and condescending in his account of his conversations with Samuelson, which gives the Olympian writing advice an undertone that would be funny if the effect were intentional. I can't quite read it that way.

Brad C., Monday, 27 May 2013 15:47 (ten years ago) link

this 22-year-old showed up on his porch and asked to be taught how to write and hadn't even read war and peace; i think he behaved extremely well for ernest hemingway.

the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Monday, 27 May 2013 15:54 (ten years ago) link

Hemingway comes across as a nicer guy in Samuelson's account of their meeting than he does in the Esquire piece.

Brad C., Monday, 27 May 2013 16:12 (ten years ago) link

I'm trying hard to recall reading The Old Man and the Sea more than 40 years ago. My memory tells me it was so stripped down and simplified that a re-reading might look like a self-parody or it might look like the apotheosis of the style Hemingway was striving for all his life. From this distance I can't say. I do recall it having gravitas far beyond what I normally read in my teens. I suspect it was a great book in its way. I guess it wouldn't take me long to find out if that's true.

Aimless, Monday, 27 May 2013 17:11 (ten years ago) link

Another one who thought it was the granddaughter's thread for a second.

Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 27 May 2013 18:04 (ten years ago) link

seven years pass...

Anyone gonna watch the Ken Burns series?

A review: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/04/12/a-new-hemingway-documentary-peeks-behind-the-myth

Revisiting his writing, I remembered it was its movement that touched me—how he gets characters from one part of the room to another. Easier said than done, and one of the ways in which he separated himself from Stein. He replaced thinking with action—which Stein considered an affront to modernism. “Gertrude Stein and Sherwood Anderson are very funny on the subject of Hemingway,” Stein wrote in “Alice B. Toklas.” “They both agreed that they have a weakness for Hemingway because he is such a good pupil. He is a rotten pupil, I protested. You don’t understand, they both said, it is flattering to have a pupil who does it without understanding it.” Stein’s voice and her experiments with sound are part of the spine of his work, and how gripping is that? To realize that Hemingway’s famously muscular prose was born of admiration for a middle-aged lesbian’s sui-generis sentences and paragraphs? Absorbing Stein’s influence, and admitting to his attraction, was one way of getting at what he always longed for: to be a girl in love with a powerful woman.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 5 April 2021 15:43 (three years ago) link

posthumously psychoanalyzing hemingway strikes me as a parlor game without much excitement

Judge Roi Behan (Aimless), Monday, 5 April 2021 16:51 (three years ago) link


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