The trouble with Hemingway, seen from the privileged vantage point of hindsight, is that he looks increasingly like a great influence but not a great author in his own right. No 20th-century writer would leave a deeper mark on his contemporaries, and as late as 1948, Evelyn Waugh, no respecter of reputations, unhesitatingly described him in print as “one of the most original and powerful of living writers.” Yet all but the very finest of his short stories now sound mannered and artificial, while the novels come off as little more than sustained exercises in mirror-gazing and pose-striking. I would like to like him more than I do, but the truth is that I find him almost unreadable, and my chronic distaste for his work is more than merely an allergy.That is how much of his writing has always struck me, too — mannered and artficial.
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Not much in common …
… F. Scott Fitzgerald & Ernest Hemingway: New Biographies Explore Great Novelists’ Differences | National Review. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
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