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The Old Man and the Sea Paperback – August 18, 1994
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- Print length112 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions4.33 x 0.94 x 6.77 inches
- PublisherARROW BOOKS
- Publication dateAugust 18, 1994
- ISBN-100099908409
- ISBN-13978-0099908401
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Product details
- Publisher : ARROW BOOKS (August 18, 1994)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 112 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0099908409
- ISBN-13 : 978-0099908401
- Reading age : 13+ years, from customers
- Item Weight : 2.12 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.33 x 0.94 x 6.77 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,686,738 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Ernest Hemingway was born in 1899. His father was a doctor and he was the second of six children. Their home was at Oak Park, a Chicago suburb.
In 1917, Hemingway joined the Kansas City Star as a cub reporter. The following year, he volunteered as an ambulance driver on the Italian front, where he was badly wounded but decorated for his services. He returned to America in 1919, and married in 1921. In 1922, he reported on the Greco-Turkish war before resigning from journalism to devote himself to fiction. He settled in Paris where he renewed his earlier friendships with such fellow-American expatriates as Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. Their encouragement and criticism were to play a valuable part in the formation of his style.
Hemingway's first two published works were Three Stories and Ten Poems and In Our Time but it was the satirical novel, The Torrents of Spring, that established his name more widely. His international reputation was firmly secured by his next three books; Fiesta, Men Without Women and A Farewell to Arms.
He was passionately involved with bullfighting, big-game hunting and deep-sea fishing and his writing reflected this. He visited Spain during the Civil War and described his experiences in the bestseller, For Whom the Bell Tolls.
His direct and deceptively simple style of writing spawned generations of imitators but no equals. Recognition of his position in contemporary literature came in 1954 when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, following the publication of The Old Man and the Sea. He died in 1961.
Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
By profession, I am a Lawyer but I am always in search of learning more and more, and learning each and everything. As far as I can think of, this characteristics of mine is developed due to my profession, as this professions demands to learn everything, means that every field of study whether science or arts or something else, because we face many different situations, and we deal with people from every field of study. So it demands from us to know their field and thoughts, so that we might better understand their words and their problems. So I want to learn more and more, and want to reach every corner of educational ocean. I know it might be very hard or some people might say that it is nearly impossible but at I want to try out.
What do I do in my spare times other than writing?
So basically I am a Lawyer. Studying is my passion. So I study and learn new things in my spare time. I write general books,novels and poetry in my spare time as my hobby. I am also a YouTube Creator, and have a channel named "Read Till Death" on YouTube. This is basically an educational channel. So in my spare time, I shoot and edit videos for this channel. I am also a blogger having blog address of "tabibhaider.blogspot.com". I also has some new physics' inventions ideas in my mind, so I also work for their formulas and other things, so that if they are correct, they might be proved. I also like to collect everything especially small things like coins and currencies of different countries etc. I love cars, so I try to make different designs of cars in my spare time. I am also interested in learning software and games coding, so I am trying my best to learn it.
The above are some of the things which I do in my spare time other than doing my routinely things. But I don't do all of these said things, everyday but it depends on my mood that what to do today.
ROBERT C. EVANS
CURRICLUM VITAE
I. B. YOUNG PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
AUBURN UNIVERSITY AT MONTGOMERY
Representative Reviews and Citations:
http://tinyurl.com/RCEvans
[RECENT MISCELLANEOUS REVIEWS BELOW]
Education 1978 84 Ph.D., Princeton University / 1973 77 B.A., magna cum laude, University of Pittsburgh
Fellowships: Richard M. Weaver Fellowship / Princeton University Fellowship / Whiting Foundation / Newberry Library / American Council of Learned Societies / Folger Shakespeare Library / Mellon Foundation / Huntington Library / National Endowment for the Humanities / American Philosophical Society / UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Awards: G. E. Bentley Prize / 1989 Professor of the Year for Alabama, Council for the Advancement and Support of Education / AUM Faculty Excellence Award / AUM Distinguished Research Professor / AUM University Alumni Professor / AUM Distinguished Teaching Professor / Director, two-year Mellon seminar on critical pluralism / Departmental Award for Collaborative Work with Students / Keynote speaker, Utah Shakespearean Festival / Professor of the Year, South Atlantic Association of Departments of English
University Appointments: Past Preceptor, Honors Program / Past Director of the Learning Center / Interim Department Head, Department of English and Philosophy
External Service: Senior editor of the Ben Jonson Journal / past member of the editorial board of Explorations in Renaissance Culture / editor for Renaissance drama and book review editor, Comparative Drama / service on National Awards Committee, American Association of University Women / editorial board, Iter/MRTS Bibliography of English Writers, 1500-1640 / editorial board of Renaissance English Texts Society / contributing editor, Donne Variorum Edition / South Atlantic Review Prize Committee
Books: Author or editor of more than fifty books (on such topics as Ben Jonson, Martha Moulsworth, Kate Chopin, John Donne, Frank O'Connor, Brian Friel, Ambrose Bierce, Amy Tan, early modern women writers, pluralist literary theory, literary criticism, twentieth-century American writers, American novelists, and seventeenth-century English literature)
Articles and notes: Author of roughly four hundred published or forthcoming essays or notes on a variety of topics, especially dealing with Renaissance literature, critical theory, women writers, short fiction, and American literature
Other: Profiled in Contemporary Authors
http://robertcevanscurriculumvitaelatest.blogspot.com/2013/03/robert-c-evans-auburn-university.html
RECENT MISCELLANEOUS REVIEWS:
Review of The Critical Reception of Flannery O'Connor: Robert C. Evans’s The Critical Reception of Flannery O’Connor, 1952–
2017: “Searchers and Discoverers” (Camden House) presents a chronological and topical overview of the “developments in O’Connor criticism” in the past 65 years. The volume demonstrates “how various critics have addressed specific aspects of O’Connor’s works, including her artistry, her theological concerns, her historical contexts, and her treatment of such topics as region, gender, and race.” Evans includes some 700 items, focusing primarily on scholarly monographs and essay collections but also treating “representative” critical articles, especially those published in the Flannery O’Connor Review, and seeking to go beyond the work of such previous O’Connor bibliographers as Robert E. Golden, R. Neil Scott, Irwin H. Streight, and Daniel Moran. In his conclusion Evans advocates for “an ongoing, online, ‘variorum’ edition of O’Connor’s works” and questions “what will happen to [O’Connor’s] place in the canon” in the future as readership changes and “readers have less and less
in common with O’Connor intellectually and theologically.” - American Literary Scholarship
+++++
Review of recent essay on Ben Jonson's THE SAD SHEPHERD. Finally, one article has analysed Jonson’s fragmentary and neglected play The Sad Shepherd. In ‘Ben Jonson’s The Sad Shepherd, the Theme of Compassion, and the Robin Hood Canon’ (in Coote and Kaufman, eds., Robin Hood and the Outlaw/ed Literary Canon, pp. 132–49), Robert C. Evans offers quite a comprehensive commentary on the play. He is particularly concerned with Jonson’s portrayal of Robin Hood, Marian, and their companions, notwithstanding the modest number of lines spoken by the characters. He considers the characters’ differences with respect to the earlier traditional Robin Hood texts; the greater role played by women; Jonson’s emphasis on virtues such as ‘generosity, friendship, fellow-feeling, and kindness’ (p. 134), and Robin’s limited ambiguity in that respect; the importance of moral worth; anti-Puritan criticism; the hero and heroine’s overall genuine and courteous love (with one exception, when Marian’s role is usurped by a wicked witch in disguise); and Robin’s generally compassionate and patient attitude to everyone. He is the type of Robin that ‘would have appealed to many of the most important people of Jonson’s day’ (p. 146). - YWES
+++++
Review of AN COLLINS AND THE HISTORICAL IMAGINATION, edited by W. Scott Howard. "Although An Collins’s devotional and meditative lyric poetry has already received scholarly attention in the past few years, the collection of ten essays edited by W. Scott Howard is the first comprehensive assessment of her spiritual autobiography, Divine Songs and Meditations. Readers who are not familiar with Collins’s work may wish to start with the final chapter, in which Robert C. Evans describes in great detail the material history and legacy of the book." - Modern Language Review
+++++
Review of WOMEN BEWARE WOMEN: A CRITICAL GUIDE, edited by Andrew Hiscock. "In the first chapter, Robert C. Evans gives a detailed spectrum of responses to this play, dating from the Romantic and Victorian periods until 1995. With reference to a variety of commentaries, annotations, and recurring critical concerns Evans stresses that the play is a criticism of the state of the "education of women" and the notion of a "marriage of convenience." - Sixteenth Century Journal
+++++
Review of VOLPONE: A CRITICAL GUIDE, edited by Matthew Steggle
"Robert C. Evans deals interestingly with Jonson's multiple sources, noting that Jonson deviates from Roman comedies in the harshness of the final judgments and observing Jonson's heartless contempt for his characters; he appropriates Marcel Maus's theory of gift-giving to note how Volpone fails in his obligation to observe reciprocity—and how his worship of the expensive gifts in his shrine amounts to that ultimate taboo for Protestants, idolatry." - Sixteenth Century Journal
+++++
Review of BILLY BUDD: CRITICAL INSIGHTS, edited by Brian Yothers
The volume’s “Critical Responses” section is strong and various. … Robert C. Evans surveys editions of Billy Budd released in the 1920s through the 1960s in order to trace how different editorial philosophies and textual apparatuses have driven evolving interpretations of the work itself (“Editions of Melville’s Billy Budd: The First Forty Years,” pp. 159–77). American Literary Scholarship 2017
+++++
Review of ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN: CRITICAL INSIGHTS, edited by R. Kent Rasmussen
In “Is Huckleberry Finn a Picaresque Novel?” (pp. 146–63) Robert C. Evans asks the “picaresque” question. The short answer is “yes,” but he takes a comprehensive look at a slippery and often misused term. His 33 criteria for “picaresque” provide a helpful taxonomy for analysis of the novel’s relationship to the genre. American Literary Scholarship 2017
+++++
Review of ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN: CRITICAL INSIGHTS, edited by R. Kent Rasmussen
In "Is Huckleberry Finn a Picaresque Novel?" Robert Evans lays an extensive foundation for why it can be so regarded. Leading picaresque authority Ulrich Wicks provides thirty-three characteristics of picaresque fiction and Evans comments on how each applies to the novel.- Twainweb.net
+++++
Review of RICHARD WRIGHT: CRITICAL INSIGHTS, edited by Kimberley Drake
Drake is a recognized scholar of African American literature, and in this stellar collection she brings together fresh critical insights on one of the most important American intellectuals of the 20th century. Divided into two sections, “Critical Contexts” and “Critical Readings,” the book provides a wide spectrum of perspectives on Wright (1908–60). For example, Robert Evans dissects Wright's autobiographical essay "I Tried to Be a Communist" to shed light on how and why Wright rejected American communism ....
+++++
Review of ESSAY ON BEN JONSON'S THE SAD SHEPHERD:
Finally, one article has analysed Jonson’s fragmentary and neglected play The Sad Shepherd. In ‘Ben Jonson’s The Sad Shepherd, the Theme of Compassion, and the Robin Hood Canon’ (in Coote and Kaufman, eds., Robin Hood and the Outlaw/ed Literary Canon, pp. 132–49), Robert C. Evans offers quite a comprehensive commentary on the play. He is particularly concerned with Jonson’s portrayal of Robin Hood, Marian, and their companions, notwithstanding the modest number of lines spoken by the characters. He considers the characters’ differences with respect to the earlier traditional Robin Hood texts; the greater role played by women; Jonson’s emphasis on virtues such as ‘generosity, friendship, fellow-feeling, and kindness’ (p. 134), and Robin’s limited ambiguity in that respect; the importance of moral worth; anti-Puritan criticism; the hero and heroine’s overall genuine and courteous love (with one exception, when Marian’s role is usurped by a wicked witch in disguise); and Robin’s generally compassionate and patient attitude to everyone. He is the type of Robin that ‘would have appealed to many of the most important people of Jonson’s day’ (p. 146). - Year's Work in English Studies
+++++
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Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2022
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The old man, Santiago, and the young boy, Manolin are friends. This setting is in Cuba. Santiago would take the young boy with him and teach him about the practice of fishing. The old man who is down on his luck thought he should never have been a fisherman, but realized that fishing was the thing he was born for.
One day, a great marlin took Santiago on an adventure leading the old man out to sea all alone. The great marlin kept a steady pace throughout the night with the old man in the boat in tow until sunrise. The old man had seen many great fish and caught two but never did it alone. He wished he had the boy as company, to see this and to help him. Yet he knew he had to go this journey by himself.
After being out to sea for a couple of days, having caught and killed his great marlin, he had to fight off a pack of relentless man-eating sharks that eventually ate the marlin he was going to bring back to the market. In the end, after the old man made it back to shore Manolin came to visit him. Santiago told the boy that the sharks beat him. He was going to give up fishing. The boy told him, "He didn't beat you. Not the fish."
The old man faced his adversary, his battle with a giant marlin out in the Gulf Stream. While Santiago had to deal with the injury to his hands, fighting off the aggressive attacks of the sharks in a pool of fresh blood surrounding his skiff (his small boat) his determination wasn't shattered. It didn't occur to the old man that in his time of weakness and apparent defeat, he garnered incredible strength to fight and win over his seemingly unbeatable foes.
Easy recommended read!
Top reviews from other countries

As you can probably tell, I am VERY DISAPPOINTED and will be complaining to Amazon about the extremely misleading appearance of this book on their website.

It was all explained at the end, but only after I'd finished the book: The version I read (on Kindle for 39p) is not the original text, but an interpretation by an Indian company. I'm guessing the book was translated into Hindi and then translated back into English. Which means the whole thing was a colossal waste of time.





Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on March 2, 2018

