
Ernest Hemingway · 1929 · War fiction
An American lieutenant driving ambulances for the Italian army during the First World War falls in love with a British nurse. The war is incompetent, the love is real, and Hemingway never lets you forget which is stronger than the other. A prose style so stripped down it taught the whole twentieth century how to write about grief.
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About the author
Ernest HemingwayAmerican · 1899–1961
Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) developed a prose style so stripped of ornamentation that it became the template for twentieth-century American fiction: short declarative sentences, meaning carried by what is not said.
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