Powerful, intense, visually magnificent, Fiesta is the novel which established Ernest Hemingway as a writer of genius.
Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in Chicago in 1899 as the son of a doctor and the second of six children. After a stint as an ambulance driver at the Italian front, Hemingway came home to America in 1919, only to return to the battlefield - this time as a reporter on the Greco-Turkish war - in 1922. Resigning from journalism to focus on his writing instead, he moved to Paris where he renewed his earlier friendship with fellow American expatriates such as Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. Through the years, Hemingway travelled widely and wrote avidly, becoming an internationally recognized literary master of his craft. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954, following the publication of The Old Man and the Sea. He died in 1961.
Remarkable, startling, disquieting
*Spectator*
Some of the finest and most restrained writing that this generation
has produced
*New York World*
Hemingway captures atmosphere by reticence and breathes life into
his characters by pages left unsaid... It is American; it is
literature; and it is a first novel by a genius
*Evening News*
It is a truly gripping story, told in a lean, hard, athletic
narrative prose that puts more literary English to shame . . . This
novel is unquestionably one of the events of an unusually rich year
in literature
*New York Times (1926)*
Hemingway captures atmosphere by reticence and breathes life into
his characters by pages left unsaid ... It is American; it is
literature; and it is a first novel by a genius
*Evening News*
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