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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the Century?
If you like short story collections, you cannot do better than this (unless, perhaps, you buy Hemingway's Finca Vigia edition, which contains all of these and several more). There is so much packed into the short, terse sentences that make up these stories that you will get new things out of them each time, and no matter how many times, you read them. For my money,...
Published on August 23, 1998

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great writing, terrible editing yet again!
This is the first of Hem's work that I've read and am very impressed with his writing and style. However, as I'm finding to be quite common with kindle editions, the book is riddled with errors. Some quality control please!!!
Published 8 months ago by InAudible


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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the Century?, August 23, 1998
By A Customer
If you like short story collections, you cannot do better than this (unless, perhaps, you buy Hemingway's Finca Vigia edition, which contains all of these and several more). There is so much packed into the short, terse sentences that make up these stories that you will get new things out of them each time, and no matter how many times, you read them. For my money, these stories and "A Moveable Feast," his memoir of Paris, represent Hemingway's most heartfelt and intimate writing.
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23 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No Match for Hemingway, May 14, 2000
By 
I read this book in two weeks, and many of the stories I read over and over, such as "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" and the Nick Adams stories. Hemingway's writing is sparse on adverbs and adjectives; his is straight forward English. This allows the reader to read through each story without having to reread a paragraph for clarity. The images and emotions that Hemingway evokes through his prose are clear and sharp. At times I felt as though I were right there with Nick Adams throwing my line into the fast-moving stream; as though I were in the bull-fighting arena watching Manuel Garcia perform his veronicas; as though I were holding Frances Macomber's gun as the buffalo was charging at him. Some of the stories I didn't particularly like (On the Quai at Smyrna, Mr. and Mrs. Elliott) but the strong stories made up for them. No wonder Hemingway won the Nobel Prize. Certainly the judges for that award looked back at his stories in deciding. Buy the book and enjoy it!
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A review of the CD set, not the author's work, November 13, 2007
By 
Jeffery L. Smith "Jeffery Smith" (New Orleans, LA United States) - See all my reviews
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There is little that I could say about Hemingway's short stories that hasn't been said before. But while Ernest Hemingway had magic with the written word, his old recordings of reading his own stories on tape are not good. Instead of sounding like how I would expect the story to be told (out loud), the author's voice is shrill and, in places, sounds more like an impression of Mark Twain. Stacy Keach is hands down the ideal voice of Hemingway's short stories (although I give four stars to Charleton Heston). His readings are straightforward, he employs accents where applicable, and minimizes the "he said" and "she said" words, making them place holders rather than part of the story itself. Based on the three volumes of Hemingway short stories, I am sufficiently enamored of Keach's readings to make me delve into other works of fiction that Keach has recorded on CD.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Experience is Everything..., August 15, 2007
Ernest Hemingway was one of the first celebrity writers. In fact, his life was so interesting that, for a time, it looked like he was more interesting than what he wrote. While I read A Farewell to Arms and The Sun Also Rises relatively early in life, I remember really getting into Carlos Baker's biography of the "larger than life" author. At first, I steered clear of Hemingway's short stories; on the whole, I am not a big fan of short stories. They're over too fast, for one thing, and add to this a professor I had along the way who likened every short story to the archetypical story of Adam and Eve, and my interest in the short story form evaporated like yesterday's rainwater. Then in the 70's I saw a Hollywood adaptation of Hemingway's Nick Adams stories (and especially after seeing Paul Newman play the washed up boxer in "The Battler"), I dusted off my copy of EH's short stories, and read them all over the course of a couple of days and was blown away by them. Later, when I taught "Big Two-Hearted River" and "My Old Man" to the American Authors class in a local high school, I had some of the most soul-searching discussions with the students. Often, I would read one of the stories aloud to them and then we'd talk about it. What was there about these stories that brought the class alive and so open to discussion? One reason might be that they are written so simply and, yet, pack such an emotional punch the reader hardly sees it coming. In "Big Two-Hearted River", for example, he's not just telling about a fishing expedition, catching and cleaning fish, packing them up for the trip home; he's got that bit about the ants on the burning log which transfers quite nicely as an allegory for human existence. In his laconic, yet sophisticated style--unparalleled by any author before or since, Hemingway creates a visceral reaction in the reader; the reader, without a lot of fancy footwork, EXPERIENCES what the first breakup feels like ( "The End of Something"), or how it feels to get drunk for the first time ("The Three Day Blow"). The plight of the returning soldier ("A Soldier's Home"), and the desperation of the dispossessed (Old Man on a Bridge) are unearthed in the reader as though he is returning home or sitting alone at the bridge during wartime. We all know, that in life Hemingway was all for grace under pressure and possessed an almost manic push to experience everything. In his short stories, especially, we can truly experience what it really feels like to be alive and never have to leave our recliner. Heartfelt thanks for that, Ernest.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars HEMINGWAY HONES HIS CRAFT, August 2, 2007
I recently reviewed this same compilation of short stories in an edition that included the short play The Fifth Column that I was interested in discussing concerning the problem of spies and infiltrators from the Franco-led Nationalist side-and what to do about them- in the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39. This edition does not contain that play and therefore I can discuss the short stories on their own terms. Although Hemingway wrote many novels, most of which I have read at one time or another, I believe that his style and sparseness of language was more suitable to the short story. This compilation of his first forty-nine although somewhat uneven in quality, as is always the case with any writer, I think makes my point. In any case they contain not only some of his most famous short stories but also some of the best.

The range of subjects that interested Hemingway is reflected here, especially those that defined masculinity in his era. Included here are classics such as The Snows of Kilimanjaro about the big game hunt, The Killers- a short and pungent gangster tale that was made into a much longer movie, many of the youthful Nick Adams stories tracing his adventures from puberty to his time of service in World War I, stories on bullfighting- probably more than you will ever want to know about that subject but reflecting an aficiado's appreciation of the art form, a few on the never-ending problems of love and its heartbreaks including a metaphorical one, reflecting the censorious nature of the times, on the impact of abortion on a couple's relationship, and some sketches that were included in A Farewell to Arms. Well worth your time. As always Hemingway masterly wields his sparse and functional language to make his points. Again, as always read this man. This is part of our literary heritage.

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great writing, terrible editing yet again!, May 29, 2011
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This is the first of Hem's work that I've read and am very impressed with his writing and style. However, as I'm finding to be quite common with kindle editions, the book is riddled with errors. Some quality control please!!!
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars stories that define what great short fiction is, June 15, 2001
By 
Stephen Dufrechou (Memphis, Tennessee) - See all my reviews
This collection of short stories defines what great short fiction is. Hemmingway constructs each story with total percision the way a genious archetect builds a perfect house, that is, with utter flawlessness. With a style of writing unique to only him, the great parisian pilgram, avid fisherman and chronicler of bullfighting gives us a timeless collection of literary gems.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Form, Function and Lenght, August 5, 2010
By 
Eric Maroney (Trumansburg, NY) - See all my reviews
The standard refrain is that Hemingway was a master of short fiction. There is something about the minimalism of his style, and the short format, that create a happy marriage of form, substance, and length.

That is certainly shown in this collection of stories, which feature some of his most well-known works. Coming back to these stories after a few years, one is struck by the geograpical span of the works. This quintessential American writer was at home in the world. The stories take place in Spain, Italy, France, Greece, Switzerland, Africa, the American West, and Upper Michigan. Hemingway was reaping the benefit of America's expansion after the Great War. He could go anywhere, do anything, and from that experience, distill these gem-like stories.

In exploring the world, he found uniquely American stories to tell.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A suggestion to Amazon, May 20, 2007
By 
Bruce Mccann (Guanajuato, Mexico) - See all my reviews
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I have bought and enjoyed the first volume of the CD set of Hemingway's stories and am thinking of buying another volume, but it would be very useful if you posted a list of all the stories on the CDs so I know exactly what I am getting.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Quintissential Hemingway, April 5, 2003
By 
A great anthology that could also be a primer on Hemingway. The beauty of this book is the access to Hemingway's work and personal timeline. You can see the writer at the height of his powers, you can see him hit his peaks and valleys. Similarly, you may notice Hemingway's sentiments changing from his green years to maturity.

This collection exhibits the best of Hemingway's storytelling, in his classics such as ...Francis Macombre, Snows of Kilimajaro. Up In Michigan, Big 2 Hearted River, his coming of age stories in the Nick Adams series, and a multitude of vignettes - some unfinished, though rarely overdone. Always present is Hemingway's commitment to evoking the sensual qualities of his surroundings and experiences - his reporter's instinct for capturing places and moments.

Ernest never uses his subjects to reach for higher truths. The immediacy of reality seems enough, if only he can capture it. Consistency is also seen throughout the stories in Hemingway's choice of characters - his breave, determined, cool and calm men and women, brief in speech but loud in actions. They dreams are muted by reality, beautifully subdued but resonant. Reading the stories, you can feel the writer grow, writing and revising, expanding and abridging. It is the style he cultivated in his stories that he perfected in his novels.

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Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway (A Scribner classic)
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