Search Books
The Body Silent: The Differ… The Writer on Her Work (Vol…

Hemingway: The Final Years

Author Michael S. Reynolds
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
Category Biography & Autobiography
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
21.37 24.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $0.01

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0393320472
ISBN-139780393320473
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank200,297
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

If one had to choose just one of Michael Reynolds's five volumes on Hemingway, The Final Years would probably be the best choice. Beginning with the fanfare surrounding the publication of For Whom the Bell Tolls on the eve of the Second World War and ending with Hemingway's suicide in 1961, the book puts all that had come before into perspective even as it probes these last two decades of its subject's life. The amount of detail is staggering--and sometimes, particularly in the case of his troubled fourth marriage to Mary Welsh, painfully discomfiting. (Long before Mary interrupts a conversation between Hem and Lauren Bacall to show Bacall a bullet she keeps for anybody who makes a move on her husband, the reader has figured out that the marriage was not exactly happy.)

The sections on Hemingway's wartime exploits, both in Cuba as a volunteer U-boat hunter and in Europe as a correspondent, are fascinating. But even in these moments--hell, even when he won the Pulitzer and the Nobel--Hemingway was subject to what he called "black ass" bouts of depression, an inherited condition that (as Reynolds notes) wasn't helped by his drinking or his tendency to put himself into dangerous situations in which he could suffer yet another severe concussion. Reynolds has traced the great writer's psychological decline so thoroughly that, when Hemingway puts the shotgun in his mouth in the final chapter, it is not as if the expected conclusion has finally arrived; rather, the reader has been made to feel an even deeper sense of the inevitability of the act. --Ron Hogan

Random Variables
View
Personal Diary of Admiral the Lord Louis Mountbatten S…
View
Jesus of Nazareth
View
I Dream of Madonna: Women's Dreams of the Goddess of P…
View
'TIS
View
Now and in time to be: Ireland & the Irish
View
Freak or Unique: The Chris Evans Story
View
Home Truths: Life Around My Father
View
Fenian Fire
View