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Green Hills of Africa

Front Cover
107 Reviews
Scribner, Jul 25, 2002 - Travel - 208 pages
"There are some things which cannot be learned quickly, and time, which is all we have, must be paid heavily for their acquiring. They are the very simplest things, and because it takes a man's life to know them the little new that each man gets from life is very costly and the only heritage he has to leave."
-- ERNEST HEMINGWAY

In the winter of 1933, Ernest Hemingway and his wife Pauline set out on a two-month safari in the big-game country of East Africa, camping out on the great Serengeti Plain at the foot of magnificent Mount Kilimanjaro. "I had quite a trip," the author told his friend Philip Percival, with characteristic understatement.
Green Hills of Africa is Hemingway's account of that expedition, of what it taught him about Africa and himself. Richly evocative of the region's natural beauty, tremendously alive to its character, culture, and customs, and pregnant with a hard-won wisdom gained from the extraordinary situations it describes, it is widely held to be one of the twentieth century's classic travelogues.

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interesting insight to real things in hemingways life. - Goodreads
It is artistic storytelling of real life events. - Goodreads
Meditations on writing great. - Goodreads
Far from his best writing. - Goodreads
But as a writer, he still holds high with this. - Goodreads

Review: Green Hills of Africa (Vintage Classics)

User Review  - Tattushenoi - Goodreads

I think after reading this, first book which I read written by Hemingway was Death in the Afternoon, I have lost some/much of the respect that I had of Hemingway as a person. In Death in the Afternoon ... Read full review

Review: Green Hills of Africa (Vintage Classics)

User Review  - Deanna McFadden - Goodreads

It's hard for me to separate my obvious distaste for Hemingway's actual big game safari from the lyrical, beautiful, evocative writing. This is now one of my favourite Hemingway books--I love the ... Read full review

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About the author (2002)

Ernest Hemingway did more to change the style of English prose than any other writer of his time. Publication of The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms immediately established Hemingway as one of the greatest literary lights of the twentieth century. As part of the expatriate community in 1920s Paris, the former journalist and World War I ambulance driver began a career that led to international fame. Hemingway was an aficionado of bullfighting and big-game hunting, and his main protagonists were always men and women of courage and conviction who suffered unseen scars, both physical and emotional. He covered the Spanish Civil War, portraying it in the novel For Whom the Bell Tolls, and he also covered World War II. His classic novella The Old Man and the Sea won the Pulitzer Prize in 1953. Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. He died in 1961.

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