I've been reading A Farewell to Arms, I'm about half way through the novel, and it's the first time I read any Hemingway.
Mostly, I've been liking it very much; the albeit rare descriptive sections in their clean yet evocative and nostalgic tone; the strength and momentum that the application of hemingway's "Iceberg thory" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iceberg_Theory) gives to the narration and the way it contributes to elevating the deeper values of the novel.
However frequently I find myself quite perplexed when reading some of the dialogue.
In some cases, especially between Catherine and Fred, not only does it seem to me cold, impersonal, and quite unrealistic, but I don't really understand what kind of idea the author is trying to convey with them, what they're supposed to "mean".
Here are a couple of examples:
“You’re such a silly boy.” She kissed me. “That’s all right for the chart. Your temperature’s always normal. You’ve such a lovely temperature.”
“You’ve got a lovely everything.”
“Oh no. You have the lovely temperature. I’m awfully proud of your temperature.”
“Maybe all our children will have fine temperatures.” “Our children will probably have beastly temperatures.”
“Isn’t there anywhere we can go?”
“No,” she said. “We have to just walk here. You’ve been away a long time.”
“This is the third day. But I’m back now.”
She looked at me, “And you do love me?”
“Yes.”
“You did say you loved me, didn’t you?”
“Yes,” I lied. “I love you.” I had not said it before.
“And you call me Catherine?”
“Catherine.”
We walked on a way and were stopped under a tree.
“Say, ‘I’ve come back to Catherine in the night.”
“I’ve come back to Catherine in the night.”
“Oh, darling, you have come back, haven’t you?”
“Yes.”
“I love you so and it’s been awful. You won’t go away?”
“No. I’ll always come back.”
“Oh, I love you so.
It just sounds plain awkward to me.
Anyway I wanted to ask you guys your opinion on this subject, because I just might be missing the "tone" of these conversations. And also I would like to try to appreciate this work fully, since I know it is widely considered one of the greatest masterpieces by one the most widely appreciated innovators of American and international literature.
Thanks!


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so keep it real folks; the Neelynator will be back.


