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- The Sun Also Rises
-
-
- (NOVEMBER 1, 1926)
-
- The Sun Also Rises--Ernest Hemingway. A lot of people
- expected a big novel from burly young Author Hemingway. His
- short work (In Our Time, 1925) bit deeply into life. He said
- things naturally, calmly, tersely, accurately. He wrote only
- about things he had experienced mostly outdoors, as a doctor's
- son in northern Michigan and as a self-possessed young tramp in
- Europe. Philosophically his implication was: "Life's great.
- Don't let it rattle you."
-
- Now his first novel is published and while his writing has
- acquired only a few affectations, his interests appear to have
- grown soggy with much sitting around sloppy cafe tables in the
- so-called Latin (it should be called American) quarter of
- Paris. He has chosen to immortalize the semi-humorous love
- tragedy of an insatiable young English War widow and an unmanned
- U.S. soldier. His title is borrowed form Ecclesiastes; his motto
- about "a lost generation," from Gertrude Stein; his widow, Lady
- Brett Ashley, from Michael Arlen's Green Hat.
-
- The picture of cosmopolitan castaways going to prizefights,
- bars, bedrooms, bull-rings in France and Spain is excessively
- accurate but not as trite as it might be. The ironic witticisms
- are amusing, for a few chapters. There is considerable emotion,
- consciously restrained, quite subtle. Experts may pronounce the
- book a masterpiece of sex-frustration psychology. but the reader
- is very much inclined to echo a remark that is one of Jake's
- favorites and presumably, Author Hemingway's too, "Oh, what the
- hell!"
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-