A Farewell to Arms Discussion
I am planning on reading A Farewell To Arms in November, as it seems that my November reading will be lighter than the past couple of months so I have the room and time to fit it in, and I know a while back someone else expressed an interest in reading the book in one of my blog posts, so I thought I would see if I could get a discussion going.
It will be an open discussion so you can join at any time, and as always, I only ask to please post spoiler warnings.
It's the third best Hemingway novel ....
I would put it after 1) The sun Also Rises and 2) For Whom the Bell Tolls. After reading the book, be sure to see the 1930s movie starring Gary Cooper. Hemingway thought Cooper was the only actor who properly created his characters on screen (Farewell to Arms and For Whom the Bell Tolls). The movie also stars Adolph Menjou as the Italian doctor. Menjou was a very dapper man who was the best dressed in Hollywod for years. While he generally played men with savoir faire, he could fit into most roles as a character actor. The girl in the movie, Catherine I think (I haven't read it for 40 years), was a beautiful young lady. I say this because most will remember her as an old lady playing character roles: Helen Hayes. A remake was made in the 1950s, but it was pretty bad. Starred Rock Hudson who I can't imagine as a lover of a woman for obvious reasons.
Husker du, just how many have you read?
I have the complete works of Hemingway, and they amount to twenty volumes. That's a sizable amount. Granted, some are not novels: two being about bull fighting, Death in the Afternoon and The Dangerous Summer; one of his newspaper articles, By Line; and one play, The Fifth Column. The rest are novels or are autobiographical such as A Moveable Feast and Break of Day. Islands in the Stream is sort of a fictional autobiographical work. The Torrents of Spring is a parody, but many think it is just a bad novel. His short stories comprise four volumes. Aside from the three novels posted in this thread, the one generally considered to be his fourth best is To Have and Have Not, which was a real mish mash as a movie.
Hemingway always thought he needed money and when his friend, director Howard Hawks, approached him with doing a movie which was guaranteed to make money, Hemingway agreed to it. Hawks got Bogart and Bacall as stars and proceeded to shoot a movie which had little to do with the book other than the main character's name, Harry Morgan. The film did make money, but Hemingway finally learned you can't trust Hollywood.