THE BEST OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY: COLLECTION OF NOVELS (DELUXE LEATHER BOUND HARDBACK EDITION)

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Anthology

THE BEST OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY: COLLECTION OF NOVELS (DELUXE LEATHER BOUND HARDBACK EDITION)

By: Ernest Hemingway

895.00

  • ISBN: 978-9124248796
  • Pages: 795 pages
  • Published: 01 September, 2025
  • Format: Deluxe Leather Bound Hardback
  • Imprint: Rupa
  • Language: English

The Best of Ernest Hemingway gathers together the very essence of a literary titan whose prose reshaped twentieth-century fiction. This collection presents his most celebrated works—A Farewell to Arms, The Sun Also Rises, Men Without Women, and the Pulitzer Prize–winning The Old Man and the Sea. Each piece reveals a different facet of Hemingway’s genius: the fragile romance set against war’s brutality, the restless wanderings of a disillusioned generation, the sharp precision of his short stories, and the elemental struggle of man against nature. Together, these works capture his unmatched ability to distil courage, desire, loss, and endurance into spare, unforgettable sentences. More than a volume of stories, this book is a journey through Hemingway’s landscapes—battlefields, bullrings, fishing boats, and cafés—where life is always lived on the edge. For new readers and lifelong admirers alike, it is both an initiation and a homecoming to the world of Hemingway.

Ernest Miller Hemingway was not simply a writer—he was a force of nature. Born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1899, he first honed his craft as a journalist before plunging into the chaos of World War I as an ambulance driver. His wounds in Italy became scars that shaped his fierce, stripped-down style of storytelling. In Paris during the 1920s, Hemingway absorbed the creative fire of the “Lost Generation,” mingling with Gertrude Stein and F. Scott Fitzgerald. His novels—The Sun Also RisesA Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and The Old Man and the Sea—redefined modern fiction with their honesty and economy of language. He hunted big game in Africa, fished in Cuba, and reported from war zones, but above all, he wrote with a discipline and intensity that earned him both the Pulitzer and the Nobel Prize. Hemingway’s life burned bright, ending in 1961, but his words remain immortal.

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