The Sun Also Rises - Ernest Hemingway BOOK REVIEW

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  • Опубликовано: 31 мар 2023
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Комментарии • 183

  • @matthewjaco847
    @matthewjaco847 Год назад +120

    When I was a student at the University of Tennessee, I checked out a copy of this book from the Hodges Library. It was beat to hell. There were corners ripped (one fell out completely while I was reading it). Somebody had even done there math homework in the back. In pen, no less.
    Out of curiosity, I checked the publication history in the front. Weirdly, there was only one date listed. “Oh no,” I thought…
    When I finished reading it, I brought the book to the front desk, and sure enough, we were holding what was left of a first edition in our hands. According to her, it should have been placed into the Rare Books catalogue years beforehand, but somehow, it had slipped into General Circulation.
    It’s a hell of a book, but needless to say, we both died a little that day.

    • @perry6762
      @perry6762 Год назад +3

      I also went to UT I wonder if it’s still there

    • @matthewjaco847
      @matthewjaco847 Год назад +2

      @@perry6762 The chances are good, though I’m not sure what state the book might be in now. I miss that library.

    • @debrachambers1304
      @debrachambers1304 Год назад +2

      *their
      I actually don't want you to correct this in your comment though, I like keeping the mistake in because it mirrors the wear and tear of the book you read.

    • @PrincessHathor
      @PrincessHathor 6 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/rgUHjS2noEw/видео.htmlfeature=shared

  • @vicjames3256
    @vicjames3256 Год назад +95

    This book still has one of my favorite last sentences: "Isn't it pretty to think so."

    • @vicjames3256
      @vicjames3256 Год назад +9

      Read this during my semester in Barcelona, right after I'd visited Pamplona and saw my first bullfight (brutal).
      Being in Spain, intimately knowing a Brett, having a Robert Cohn as a friend IRL, I felt a closeness to this novel.
      And at 20 that last line hit me hard.

    • @quitefranklyjosh
      @quitefranklyjosh Год назад +3

      The last line is "isn't IT pretty to think so?". What you said completely changes the context my friend.

    • @vicjames3256
      @vicjames3256 Год назад +1

      @@quitefranklyjosh hahaha sorry for the typo. Def changes the context lol

    • @jaekn
      @jaekn 9 месяцев назад

      Spoiler alert.. lol

    • @andym28
      @andym28 8 месяцев назад

      I could Imagine from a trip to Spain I took li hasn't changed much from the basque country to spain to pamplona lifs is probably still cosisting of cava and tapas parties even if he did get his dick injured to rise another day.

  • @diegolunkes2062
    @diegolunkes2062 Год назад +75

    You talked so passionately about The Old Man and the Sea that you made me read the book and it was an amazing experience. Hugs from Brazil.

    • @kauageddes1378
      @kauageddes1378 Год назад +1

      não consigo mais ver um vídeo sem achar comentário brasileiro kkkkkkkkkk salve meu compatriota

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 3 месяца назад +1

      Try A Farewell to Arms!

  • @hermetischism4671
    @hermetischism4671 Год назад +42

    I think the lack of "Carpe Diem" today has a lot to do with just how addictive the internet is. The neurological studies are pretty clear in that it saps our dopamine which is our main driver for motivation. I was born in the late nineties and even I remember a time when It was fairly common to have lengthy conversations with strangers and to see other people doing the same.

    • @bluegregory6239
      @bluegregory6239 Год назад +6

      Hemingway had more real experiences in his relatively short life than any given hundred of today's soft generation. Wrote better about those experiences, too.

    • @hermetischism4671
      @hermetischism4671 Год назад +3

      @@bluegregory6239 The PBS documentary on his life by Ken Burns is amazing if you haven't seen it

  • @sean48442
    @sean48442 Год назад +32

    Interesting point about the era allowing people to actually "breathe."

  • @BroShredGnar
    @BroShredGnar Год назад +17

    This book completely bored me to death. Always lovely to see how different folks perspectives can vary so much!

  • @andrewlurndahl
    @andrewlurndahl Год назад +38

    Glad to see this review, my wife recently passed away, and we both loved this novel.

    • @billhicks8
      @billhicks8 Год назад +8

      Sorry for your loss, I hope reading the novel you both loved gives some moments of reprieve

    • @nikkivenable73
      @nikkivenable73 Год назад +6

      😢. How are you? That’s probably, no, it is, the stupidest question. You are living probably my worst nightmare. I nearly lost my husband 4 years ago from cancer and by God’s grace, he survived. But now I’m so damn paranoid every day I’m going to lose him and so life isn’t very enjoyable. I’m trying to work through it. One thing I realized when I nearly lost him is that I didn’t cherish him nearly enough. It was not a fun feeling. I pray you can find joy again, Andrew. Books are such a great comfort and I hope you can find some of them to crawl into and find some peace. Much love from Omaha.

    • @BetterThanFoodBookReviews
      @BetterThanFoodBookReviews  Год назад +19

      I am deeply sorry to hear that Andrew. I hope you are as well as can be. Thank you for watching.

  • @bobhopper609
    @bobhopper609 Год назад +15

    I first read this book in high school and loved it. What I loved more, though, was A Farewell to Arms. That struck me hard.

  • @quinnholleman1547
    @quinnholleman1547 Год назад +19

    I (and this may have been my own space in life at the time) honestly got the exact opposite feeling from the novel when I first read it last October. The characters are all trying to fill the void left by the war with partying and drinking and travel and sex and yet they keep chasing after something else because nothing gives them any purpose. Yes, it shows the decadence of the time, but it also shows the emptiness and loneliness of all these characters wandering around aimlessly with nowhere to go and nothing to do, having to deal with their own despair at how utterly meaningless their lives feel, and it's Jake, the hard-working man who has to deal with what the war literally did to him who, by the end, begins to learn and grow while everyone else wastes their lives away chasing after the wind.

    • @nickkoprowicz4831
      @nickkoprowicz4831 9 месяцев назад +1

      That was my interpretation too

    • @han.nah.
      @han.nah. 4 месяца назад

      Just finished it; same here.

  • @jamesbaxterfromax
    @jamesbaxterfromax Год назад +12

    I think the last chapter is stunning as well. One of my favourites sections from any book. Really moving.

  • @prioritystrength
    @prioritystrength Год назад +12

    I'm intrigued by your commentary at the end of the video about the travel scenes. There's a lot about Sun that I didn't appreciate on the first pass, but for me, the more bucolic scenes were the most striking. I read it about a year and a half ago and I can still picture the fishing scene ("This is country") with as much clarity as anything I've read over the last few weeks. Reading those few pages felt to me like stepping into a painting that's impossibly vivid for the scant number of brushstrokes needed to paint it.

  • @edgared9658
    @edgared9658 Год назад +5

    I still remember the first time I started reading “The old man and the sea”. I fell in love with his prose immediately, with the first damn paragraph. Then I read “The sun also rises”. Then “A moveable feast”… and since then, he became my favorite writer. And you are right: no one else writes like him, not even if they try.

  • @usmnt4423
    @usmnt4423 Год назад +7

    Clifford Lee “Suns Out, Guns Out” Sargent

  • @CalebBedford
    @CalebBedford Год назад +4

    ‘Everybody Behaves Badly’ was a really interesting read for me and a good source of additional information for the novel. I like that it takes a journalistic approach instead of a literary one.

  • @SirinxDumplings
    @SirinxDumplings Год назад +5

    I love this book... I love the last page so much I wanna cry....

  • @timothychristopher1691
    @timothychristopher1691 Год назад +6

    "Everybody Behaves Badly" is an amazing read!

  • @ThePortlyRaven
    @ThePortlyRaven Год назад +6

    Excellent video! I read this book at university, which was a long time ago 😂 This brought a lot of memories back, thank you. Also, I really admire what you’ve achieved with your channel, and it’s one of the inspirations for recently starting my own channel, so thank you again. Peace from Australia!

  • @mn7392
    @mn7392 Год назад +5

    For me, Hemingway is one of the good nature writer. Reading Big Two-Hearted River, I felt as if I was there with him.

  • @vaildog1
    @vaildog1 Год назад +3

    The first chapter is one of the best in American literature, culminating in the “Try to take it.” Repetition, absolutely devastating and probably one of the most understated depictions of masculinity in crisis that I’ve ever read.

  • @vicjames3256
    @vicjames3256 Год назад +3

    I'm with you about the physical descriptions being harder to grasp than even the more complex of concepts.

  • @donovanwhitley775
    @donovanwhitley775 Год назад +4

    The story of all of Hemingway’s injuries alone is itself dramatic and tragic-having ultimately committing suicide from, arguably, hemochromatosis and severe concussions.

  • @ellelala39
    @ellelala39 Год назад +5

    My reading notes say I read this book in 2010, and like you, Cliff, I don't remember much of it at all. Though I do remember a lot about Hemingway the man. Due for a reread, methinks. Thanks!

  • @desgrazi
    @desgrazi Год назад +2

    I have that same difficult to build physical spaces in my head, felt that reading The Tartar Steppe a few days ago, but it doesn't diminished the greatness of the book at all.
    Haven't read any Hemingway yet, but after your review I'll certainly look after this one. Thanks!

  • @johnsailorsgoat
    @johnsailorsgoat Год назад +2

    Love this book too! I'll get around to rereading it at some point because I know it will all the more incredible.

  • @samuelshaw3058
    @samuelshaw3058 Год назад +3

    Damned good review. One of my favourites too and it is nice to have someone give a more analytical slant to it than I can.

  • @renoesmaeilian9489
    @renoesmaeilian9489 Год назад +7

    Read this beautiful novel 30 years ago and went to Pamplona and did the bill run and met a beautiful Spanish woman there. It was the best time of my life.

  • @susannestrub6695
    @susannestrub6695 Год назад +2

    Aaaah, Hemingway! I am so happy to hear how you describe his writing, his way of telling a story - because I agree completely! What a pleasure, thank you so much!
    Greetings from Belgium (not far from Paris 😉)

  • @alm5851
    @alm5851 Год назад +1

    Reading now! Ty for the review.

  • @pufyshoes
    @pufyshoes Год назад +1

    I have a really hard time constructing a town layout when it’s described like “the bank is north of the river that runs south west past the school, which is bounded…” etc etc

  • @r.s.9861
    @r.s.9861 Год назад +6

    Timeless Masterpiece! Great Review!

  • @thankyoutruckers
    @thankyoutruckers 11 месяцев назад +1

    "it's a story of virility shot to pieces" that's one hell of a pun

  • @SymbolsPatternsGnosis
    @SymbolsPatternsGnosis Год назад +2

    The clipped dialogue with Jake Barnes and Ashley in the back of the taxi cab without the “he said” “she said” signifiers is progressive - an inverted echo of the type of text message dialogue used by Jennifer Egan in A Visit From The Goon Squad.

    • @SymbolsPatternsGnosis
      @SymbolsPatternsGnosis Год назад

      An excellent follow up to ‘the sun also rises’ would be Steinbeck’s first acclaimed novel “in dubious battle”.

  • @theangelzlayer
    @theangelzlayer Год назад +5

    Think I see The Obscene Bird of Night by Jose Donoso on your shelf. Incredibly based.

  • @normalguy4548
    @normalguy4548 Месяц назад +1

    Took me nearly 200 pages to realize that “tight” meant drunk

  • @BookmarkwithDonNoble
    @BookmarkwithDonNoble Год назад +2

    WOW!!!!! this video is so good!

  • @TimOnBooks
    @TimOnBooks Год назад +3

    Great review Clifford. And a fantastic summary of Hemingway's writing style. I've read pretty much everything he's written, and The Sun Also Rises is my second favorite (To Have and Have Not is actually my favorite, even though it is considered "critically" his worst book). I really enjoy your videos because we definitely gravitate toward similar authors/styles. For 20+ years, I've averaged 100-150 books read per year, and some of my favorite authors are Camus, J. G. Ballard, Hemingway, Steinbeck, Bradbury, Vonnegut, etc. I also read a lot of SciFi/Fantasy, so I wanted to make a recommendation for you: Hyperion by Dan Simmons. I think you would absolutely love this book. Think Canterbury Tales meets modern, uncensored SciFi. It's technically a four book series, but often read as two and two. Full of amazing character development across multiple worlds and rants about religion and politics. Considered controversial as well because it is chocked-full of sex and violence. The series is a beast (about 2,500 pages across all four books) but would be totally worth the investment of time. I consider the best book ever written in the genre.

  • @alistair5990
    @alistair5990 Год назад

    Just finished reading this one. Hemingway’s prose will never die. Thank you for your fine words, Cliff. Thinking about the next Hemingway I’ll check out.

  • @Phoenixx42
    @Phoenixx42 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this. I've read this long ago but I'm going to actually read it now, if you understand.

  • @joniarmel7308
    @joniarmel7308 17 дней назад

    Great review. You are very good at this .

  • @modernoverman
    @modernoverman Год назад +3

    I bought this book last year, this review makes me really want to finally sit down and read it.

    • @jaekn
      @jaekn 9 месяцев назад

      But the purchase of a book doesn't inspire such actions. Interesting.

    • @madguitar1086
      @madguitar1086 4 месяца назад

      Good luck. It’s a snoozer.

  • @eddiejackrisinger4072
    @eddiejackrisinger4072 20 дней назад

    Just picked this book off the shelve of my humble library. 3 chapters in I had to stop myself for fear I may have finished the entire novel in one sitting.
    Thanks for the review 😃 I'm looking forward to the next 3 chapters!

  • @Ivan-hm9jz
    @Ivan-hm9jz Год назад +1

    I remember reading something by Bukowski where he said "The Sun Also Rises" was about "a guy who cannot get it up". I read Hem's debut novel about 5 times, listened to its audioversion once. Must read, must re-read, must have and must gift.

  • @DangerfieldChris
    @DangerfieldChris Год назад

    Just found your channel. I like it. This is a damn good novel. Best wishes.

  • @johanvoellner1849
    @johanvoellner1849 2 месяца назад +1

    Sober and interesting analysis of this book, considering that i went through something similar to Jake Barnes. Not in the war though, but a similar consequence, so this book has been eye opening for me. Life is interesting all right, hard at times, but new dimensions open up for you when sex is no longer the default option.

  • @valdircanado
    @valdircanado Год назад +1

    Great review!

  • @nosmoker8
    @nosmoker8 Год назад +4

    Spain is the absolute shit. Hemingway enhanced my trip like no other author could do it regardless of what country one would be inspired to visit. My understanding is that this book was finished in Valencia, and when I was in Valencia I made it a mission to go to Hemingway’s favorite restaurant there, La Pepica, which was affordable as fuck and an absolute treat from the atmosphere to the joviality of the waiters to the food itself. As expected, there was a fairly large glasses panel dedicated to the man itself on one of the walls, along with perhaps hundreds of other people’s photographs all over the restaurant, a lot of them having been toreadores, of course. No trip to Spain, or Paris and Milan for that matter, should be made without a little Hemingway in the backpack. An adequate review, I’ve a feeling this is just the kind of review that would have made Papa NOT want to uppercut the critic in the jaw.

    • @Liisa3139
      @Liisa3139 Год назад +1

      In what way was Spain a sh*?

    • @girishgowda7661
      @girishgowda7661 Год назад

      ​@@Liisa3139 when someone says it's the shit, it implies they like it as opposed to it's shit. Well, that means the obvious. It's just gen z slang😅

  • @patrickweller5254
    @patrickweller5254 Год назад +3

    I've struggled to get into this during my one and only attempt prior. I'll give it another go at some point.

  • @mn7392
    @mn7392 Год назад +2

    I watched your review of On the Road just before this one and I see a connection between the two books in the manic movement of Brett, Jake, et al. They can't seem to sit still and are constantly looking for something fulfilling - sex, a meal, booze, a good bullfight.

  • @fredymendez855
    @fredymendez855 Год назад +3

    So I usually read contemporary fiction and I wanted to dive into some classics, for many of the books I read it only takes me 2-3 weeks to finish them, but with this book it took 3 months of sporadic reading. The language and style of writing was new to me and read slower than usual, also because I read this book sporadically I missed or forgot the part that gave the reader a hint that Jake was impotent! This fact alone explains so much because I grew frustrated to see Jake having to witness the woman he loves get shagged by other men left and right. I wished i would have read it properly.

  • @testcardII
    @testcardII Год назад +3

    Friendships between men and women, indeed…not really a common subject in books, it seems. My best friends have always been male, for some reason. Genuine, long-lasting friendships. Great video!

  • @barbarajohnson1442
    @barbarajohnson1442 Год назад +1

    Thank you!!

  • @kieran_forster_artist
    @kieran_forster_artist Год назад +2

    Enjoyed the positivity in this book and in the review….the carpe diem idea is not as embraced anymore, as Cliff said.

  • @kirkalex5257
    @kirkalex5257 6 месяцев назад

    You da man, Cliff. Awesome review. Where can people send you books? Quite of my output is blue collar, and have one entitled You're Gonna Have Trouble that I would like to send in to you to look at, sir. Thank you.

  • @beryloflove
    @beryloflove Год назад +3

    Well, somehow I had missed that his injury prevented him from having sex during my recent read through, so that really adds a whole deeper layer to the book. Wow

  • @antherthalmhersser7239
    @antherthalmhersser7239 Год назад +4

    Next do a farewell to arms and wear a long sleeved shirt

  • @Liisa3139
    @Liisa3139 Год назад +19

    Not a day goes by when I wouldn't think that if only I could destroy this whole digital "culture", including the internet, I would do it without hesitation and I would not miss it. So, maybe I could read this book and get a taste of the times when you had time to "waste" with friends, not doing much else than observing other people, talking, sharing meals, drinking etc. And totally without somebody reminding that this or that is unhealthy (like smoking, cigarettes) and that you should hurry here or there. I'm glad that I got to live a good portion of my life before the world went digital. Life REALLY was better before. So f*n much better.

    • @ottol.1716
      @ottol.1716 Год назад +2

      Plot twist: you still can do this!

    • @Liisa3139
      @Liisa3139 Год назад +1

      @@ottol.1716 Practically impossible to live without any digital connection. Only homeless people may do it, but their lifestyle is not appealing. I personally don't have a smartphone, but any meeting with friends will involve digital interference via their gadgets.

    • @fluffymadeupcat
      @fluffymadeupcat Год назад +2

      A lovely sentiment. As a child of the 80s and 90s I feel so lucky to not have grown up with the internet. I feel we all had more freedom, more friends, more time, more fun and a heckload less anxiety.

    • @themiddleplace
      @themiddleplace Год назад +2

      ​@@Liisa3139 the thing is, probably by intentional design, that it's all connected isn't it and on your phone and most people need their phone for work, despite how self-disciplined you it's almost impossible to not get sucked back in. I ended up making a political vid after avoiding politics for months just because I happened to look at Reddit and see the wrong thing. And here I am now discussing the whole thing with you!

    • @pastel7324
      @pastel7324 Год назад

      Move to Europe.

  • @heraalltheway
    @heraalltheway Месяц назад

    being american cultural culture student and watching videos from 10 year or only 1 year by this man

  • @MementoMorituri
    @MementoMorituri Год назад +2

    Clifford Lee Sargent: "Whoever you are...just grabbing life by the balls and going as HARD as you can..."
    Jake Barnes: "Not cool."

  • @taylor5065
    @taylor5065 Год назад +4

    In the introduction to my copy it claims that Hemingway said that he didn’t intend for jake to have a physical injury, only that the war caused him to lose his sex drive. Which I personally think fits the story better

    • @dianal.clausen8118
      @dianal.clausen8118 Год назад +1

      That rings true with me, Taylor. Somewhere, somehow I was taught that by someone I respected. I think that makes it even sadder.

    • @jackwalter5970
      @jackwalter5970 Год назад +2

      Yes, Hemingway said Jake didn't actually lose his jewels. Not sure what the "injury" was.

    • @taylor5065
      @taylor5065 Год назад

      @@dianal.clausen8118 agreed :)

    • @taylor5065
      @taylor5065 Год назад +3

      @@jackwalter5970 I believe a potential symptom of PTSD is lack of sex drive, so I guess there’s one explanation

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone Год назад +1

      How do we explain the bit where the Italian officer says Jake "gave MORE than his life", then? (Proviso: it's been almost fifty years since I read that novel; please don't tell me that that's not even in there!).

  • @Jimdunne_
    @Jimdunne_ 28 дней назад +1

    Just finished reading this novel….I struggled to grasp the meaning and have found it quite boring….but a deeper Analysis and reflection it clicks with me, particularly the disillusionment and the paralysis within the characters - strangely positive and happy

  • @chadennis2688
    @chadennis2688 Год назад +1

    Yes sir!

  • @christopherviggiano9367
    @christopherviggiano9367 Год назад +2

    That was a damn fine good video

  • @gordonfelesina3170
    @gordonfelesina3170 3 месяца назад

    Best book reviewer on RUclips!!

  • @rustyshackelford934
    @rustyshackelford934 Год назад +10

    Absolutely beautiful novel. I love most of the novels of his, that I’ve read, but this is the one that I can truly relate to the most. For good or bad.
    There does seem to feel like a liberating freedom throughout the book, to just experience life to the fullest without any inhibitions.
    I know what you mean though, everything has a fake sheen of positivity (when everyone seems miserable), they say nice things, but it all is a facade and they try to sell you that every single moment of life is profound. And then finishing it by trying to sell you a Lexus.

  • @bluegregory6239
    @bluegregory6239 Год назад +7

    "Isn't it pretty to think so?" One of the Ten Best Novels in American History, and quite arguably Hemingway's best.

  • @keithyeager8117
    @keithyeager8117 Год назад +2

    You should consider doing a podcast. I think you’d nail it.

  • @wabisabi7755
    @wabisabi7755 Год назад +1

    You know what you were doing in that thumbnail. 😉 💪

  • @robertmoore8602
    @robertmoore8602 Год назад +2

    I'd say Mark Twain is THE AMERICAN AUTHOR but I will check this Hemingway guy out. Thanks.

  • @liammogan257
    @liammogan257 2 месяца назад +1

    i have the same edition as you! its my fave Hemingway

  • @barbarajohnson1442
    @barbarajohnson1442 Год назад +1

    Fun, I just got this out, because I love his short stories. I must say in other countries there is a joie du Vivre, every night social, COMMUNITY! We are off the rails here, chasing the $

  • @Krillinjustchillin
    @Krillinjustchillin 3 месяца назад

    Anyone have any suggestions on other books like this?

  • @fj103
    @fj103 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @user-hn7my8ow4s
    @user-hn7my8ow4s 10 месяцев назад

    Good review .....

  • @dirteater7579
    @dirteater7579 Год назад +2

    Have you ever read or heard of the novel Blindsight by Peter Watts? I just finished it and am now telling literally anyone that will listen to read it, that shit made HP lovecraft feel like scary stories to tell in the dark. That shit was so terrifying it made me question if God could exist if the ideas proposed are true. Everyone who sees this comment should read it and Clifford, I will give you a fat kiss on the mustache if you talked about it in a video

  • @szabolcsmezei4088
    @szabolcsmezei4088 Год назад +1

    Have you read any Corfu stories by Durrell? (either of the two writers)

    • @dianal.clausen8118
      @dianal.clausen8118 Год назад

      I'm a fan and f Lawrence Durrell, The Alexandria Quartet, set in Egypt before Israel came to be. I think you'll find it compelling.

  • @marvincastro5929
    @marvincastro5929 Год назад +1

    one of my favorite books

  • @jackrimbaud3826
    @jackrimbaud3826 10 месяцев назад

    Everybody Behaves Badly is a pretty good novel about the making of Sun and Hemingway's early years. Well worth reading.

  • @mikewiest5135
    @mikewiest5135 Год назад

    When I saw the thumbnail I thought you were reviewing GUNS OF NAVARONE 💪🏻😂

  • @jackiehammerton
    @jackiehammerton 11 месяцев назад

    Just finished it ❤

  • @v.cackerman8749
    @v.cackerman8749 Год назад +2

    No anesthesia!? Jesus Christ.
    Anyways, Ernest Hemingway is on my list of “authors I need to read more”.

  • @aliteralwolfstaint8017
    @aliteralwolfstaint8017 Год назад +1

    Hey, Cliff. How's your day going?

  • @calj27
    @calj27 Год назад

    Before I read the sun also rises at 22 I’m sure I was still reading (unenthusiastically) young adult novels, in a massive reading slump. This book got me into all the important early 20th century writers.

    • @LiteraryAtlas
      @LiteraryAtlas Год назад

      Definitely a worthy novel to get you into these kind of writers!

  • @filmlover123
    @filmlover123 3 месяца назад

    Clifford looks like David Benioff mixed with Bradley Cooper. Why can't I find a partner who is obsessed with books like I am who looks like this??? 😂

  • @senorfunball
    @senorfunball 5 месяцев назад

    While reading this I was like WTF ? Short choppy sentences, drinking, eating, drinking, drinking...
    But by the end, reading the final page i was overwhelmed, so great, soon after saw the PBS biography of Hemingway, what a character, truly larger than life
    👍👍👍

  • @skylarkportraitstudio
    @skylarkportraitstudio Год назад

    Sure looks like Florida. Tampa possibly. Florida definitely. Books tend to mold pretty darn quick out there if you leave them out on the patio table. Still good for dog chews if you do. Still good for killing skeeters if the dog won’t. Bad ones are for whacking a neighbor who hits your house with a hack drive. Love books. They are so useful.

  • @kevinkrochak2546
    @kevinkrochak2546 11 месяцев назад +1

    "I think Hemingway's drunkenness was a rebellion against the stiff and stodgy sobriety of his parents.....and of course, also to get fucked up." 🤣 Thanks, I really enjoy all your reviews.

  • @qwertzasdfgh4710
    @qwertzasdfgh4710 Год назад +1

    Bro
    you gotta try War at the End of the World
    trust me 😊

  • @jymwrite
    @jymwrite 9 месяцев назад

    It's ironic that you used the phrase "grabbing by the balls" considering the plight of Jake Barnes. This is one of the books that I read and reread when I was learning to write, there's a lot to be learned in Hemingway, especially As the Sun Also Rises.

  • @CookiesNMilf
    @CookiesNMilf Год назад +1

    You look so much like Arthur from Peaky Blinders. I’ve been trying to place the face and just started rewatching it. Is he a long lost brother? Are you a Shelby? You have that class about you.

    • @benp4877
      @benp4877 Год назад

      Thankfully Cliff doesn’t have Arthur’s … eh, personality issues!

  • @materiagrix
    @materiagrix Год назад +2

    I am currently reading this book, it is not only the worst Hemingway I’ve read so far, but it is the worst novel I have read in a long time. It is basically a bad journal, and a depiction of travelling from what I call a surface traveller (a typical male middle aged American tourist). But I’m glad someone gets to enjoy it

    • @cansueceklc7745
      @cansueceklc7745 Год назад +2

      So interesting I’ve read my fair share of Hemingway and this was my favourite 😂 probably because I like stories that reflect the spirit of the time it was written in. Glad he wrote other novels so we all have something to enjoy by him.

    • @taylor5065
      @taylor5065 Год назад

      @@cansueceklc7745 to me it is barely beaten or tied by A Farewell to Arms, it’s so hard to chose

    • @cansueceklc7745
      @cansueceklc7745 Год назад +1

      @@taylor5065 That one was also fantastic I think it scarred me for life though. Definitely a close second for me.

    • @taylor5065
      @taylor5065 Год назад

      @@cansueceklc7745 I had no idea it was gonna end that way, I swear I’ll always remember that shock.

    • @cansueceklc7745
      @cansueceklc7745 Год назад +1

      @@taylor5065 Especially after reading the other possible endings he plotted my broken appreciation increased He surely chose the most devastating one. It was so sudden just like death itself brilliant!

  • @emaan7023
    @emaan7023 Год назад

    Wow.

  • @doctorfaustxvi
    @doctorfaustxvi Год назад +1

    'mirin the physique, lean and mean 👌🏻

  • @SymbolsPatternsGnosis
    @SymbolsPatternsGnosis Год назад

    Take a look at Hemingway’s story “a cat in the rain“. Now compare it to his novel The Garden of Eden. It’s the same story. You’ll need to be familiar with esoteric Jewish creation myths involving Lilith.
    Take a look at the old man and the sea. Now consider this novel you’re reviewing here. It’s the same story… one of these days you’ll see it. Good luck out there.
    “ there’s a bull and a Matador dueling in the sky. Inhale, in hell, there’s heaven.”

  • @SymbolsPatternsGnosis
    @SymbolsPatternsGnosis Год назад +3

    Isn’t it pretty to think so?

  • @littledebby365
    @littledebby365 Год назад

    I wish he as well as Hunter S Thompson hadn't killed themselves. I think they realized they had created a monster persona, and at some point could not Feed The Monster anymore. It's a pity they could not separate themselves from the persona, and pivot back to reality.

  • @Sorcerollo
    @Sorcerollo 2 месяца назад +1

    So far people either love this book or they hate it. Where's the disconnect? I can see how reading the story can seem tame and boring, but if you were watching the bull fights yourself it definitely wouldn't be. Do people just have impotent imaginations?

  • @grantlovesbooks
    @grantlovesbooks Год назад +1

    I don't know that I would recommend the Festival of San Fermin. I was there in 2001, lucky that I arrived two days early, and got to see the town before the hoards arrived. But it felt as though the entire city were preparing for a siege, which is not unrealistic.
    Aside from the statue of Hemingway, there is very little to do with culture. All the idiots from all over, come to get drunk and behave like animals. It is mostly about drinking.
    Running with the bulls is quite good, but unbelievably reckless.
    I also did a review of this, and my experience in Pamplona,
    ruclips.net/video/4KH90QD030g/видео.html

    • @littledebby365
      @littledebby365 Год назад

      Idiots from all over; that reminds me of the scene at Sloppy Joe's in Key West.

  • @coreyjenrette8060
    @coreyjenrette8060 Год назад +1

    One of my literature professors once told me I should stop proudly admiring Hemingway’s work because he was sexist and misogynistic. Poor lady. Really put a bad taste in my mouth.

  • @unchartedrocks1
    @unchartedrocks1 Год назад

    No way the character is a reflection of Hemingway himself. "The character is a heavy drinker."
    "Nvm. I stand corrected."

  • @duswil3934
    @duswil3934 10 месяцев назад +1

    post ww1 and spanish flu. They were happy to be alive.