My favorite Hemingway work is The Old Man and the Sea. I think it is one of the most beautiful stories I've ever read. The old man's struggle need to prove himself, his willingness at his age to take an enormous risk, his momentary success and ultimate failure, the admiration he received from the villagers despite his failure. I think it's a wonderful story and beautifully written. And at no point in time did I think to myselt, " This would be so much better if Katherine Hepburn were sitting in the front of the boat.
There is a lot of discussion about Hemingway's female characters and I agree that they are not special. But I have found that male authors in general have difficulty developing female characters. Despite all of the psychological gobbledy-gook put forth, men in general don't understand women well enough to develop strong female characters. This may be fodder for another thread, but I can't name a single work by an American male author that features a strong, central female character.
Hemingway lived a macho life. Hunting, fishing, drinking, boxing, driving ambulances during wartime, hanging out in Paris. The themes prevail in his novels and his short stories. I read three of his novels this year and several of his short stories and I don't find his style of setting. It's powerful writing. It's real. It's raw. I think one either likes or not, or simpy tolerates it. Papa's alright with me.


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