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Green hills of Africa

Front Cover
107 Reviews
Scribner, 1935 - Biography & Autobiography - 294 pages

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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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Contents

Section 1
3
Section 2
34
Section 3
35
Copyright

19 other sections not shown

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About the author (1935)

Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in the family home in Oak Park, Ill., on July 21, 1899. In high school, Hemingway enjoyed working on The Trapeze, his school newspaper, where he wrote his first articles. Upon graduation in the spring of 1917, Hemingway took a job as a cub reporter for the Kansas City Star. After a short stint in the U.S. Army as a volunteer Red Cross ambulance driver in Italy, Hemingway moved to Paris, and it was here that Hemingway began his well-documented career as a novelist. Hemingway's first collection of short stories and vignettes, entitled In Our Time, was published in 1925. His first major novel, The Sun Also Rises, the story of American and English expatriates in Paris and on excursion to Pamplona, immediately established him as one of the great prose stylists and preeminent writers of his time. In this book, Hemingway quotes Gertrude Stein, "You are all a lost generation," thereby labeling himself and other expatriate writers, including Scott Fitzgerald, T.S. Eliot, and Ford Madox Ford. Other novels written by Hemingway include: A Farewell To Arms, the story, based in part on Hemingway's life, of an American ambulance driver on the Italian front and his passion for a beautiful English nurse; For Whom the Bell Tolls, the story of an American who fought, loved, and died with the guerrillas in the mountains of Spain; and To Have and Have Not, about an honest man forced into running contraband between Cuba and Key West. Non-fiction includes Green Hills of Africa, Hemingway's lyrical journal of a month on safari in East Africa; and A Moveable Feast, his recollections of Paris in the Roaring 20s. In 1954, Hemingway won the Nobel Prize in Literature for his novella, The Old Man and the Sea. A year after being hospitalized for uncontrolled high blood pressure, liver disease, diabetes, and depression, Hemingway committed suicide on July 2, 1961, in Ketchum, Idaho.