
Relations from a heterosexual perspective, the norm in 1958" and Reprinted and more-often quoted, this piece assesses "human Is probably as widely known as Plimpton's interview. Spilka's "The Death of Love in The Sun Also Rises" (1958) Wagner-Martin includes two other pieces from the 1950s, Personality that revealed new depths with each turn. Interview points us toward an answer: Hemingway's was a crystalline Responses to Hemingway's works were biographical, Plimpton's Today's students seek an explanation for why so many of our early It reminds us of the long era that treated the book almost exclusivelyĪs a roman a clef and it associates Hemingway with his protagonists. Hemingway, which is precisely what our first responses to the novel did Question, turns out to be an appropriate beginning: it showcases The interview, despite its scant reference to the novel in But the real reason for this casebook is to help the readerįind the permanence of the literature, its luminous value Novel has been historicized over and over, and a few of theĮssays that were influential in that mode of criticism do appear Rises a life relevant to the twenty-first century. Range of years, giving today's readers a way to create a montage,Ī palimpsest of ideas that may help to give The Sun Also

The aim of this collection is to bring together criticism from a Wagner-Martin's explanation is worth quoting in full: Opening a new casebook on The Sun Also Rises? Hemingway's first novel, what business has this old chestnut (1958) Jake's wound and making reference to the composition of I know that I have been entertained and edified by this interviewįor more than thirty years, but beyond addressing the nature of Interviewer: Was there some technical problem there? What was it The last page of it, thirty-nine times before I was satisfied. I rewrote the ending to Farewell to Arms, Hyperbole earnestness, laced with irony and simplicity, fraught with Of the characteristics that make him interesting: honesty, buoyed with Question, "How much rewriting do you do?" Hemingway melds many Soon after first light as possible." And, in response to the "When I am working on a book or a story I write every morning as Much-rehearsed and now-classic description of his writing process, Hemingway's pose as the "famous author," delivering his The author amid his books and toys and mail and skins.

Personal visit by Plimpton and epistolary replies by Hemingway, places The "interview," which is really an amalgamation of a Paris Review captures Hemingway wearing a half dozen of his favorite For instance, George Plimpton's interview for the A few of them are as familiar to us by now as the tales of our

Linda Wagner-Martin's Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises: AĬasebook. Readers of this journal will recognize many of the selections from Retrieved from Įdited by Linda Wagner-Martin. APA style: Ernest Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises': A Casebook.Ernest Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises': A Casebook." Retrieved from
THE SUN ALSO RISES ERNEST HEMINGWAY BOOK CITATION FREE
MLA style: "Ernest Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises': A Casebook." The Free Library.
