I first read this collection of Hemingway stories when it came out in 1970, and a few times since. I have read all of the stories many times, previously collected in other configurations. I see Papa =as one of the greatest short story writers of all time, and one of the great writers of all time. I don’t have to talk about his life to say that. Some/many famous artists may be philandering drunks, crazy, and so on. But while I see him as a five-star short story writer, I don’t think this particular collection is quite five-stars-excellent, but most of the stories here are great.
I read this book in (machismo-oriented?) Alaska recently, one of my trips of a lifetime, and this may have made me forgive him for that aspect of the work I find a little (for me) anachronistic, as in the kill-a-lion-and-prove-you-are-a-man-to-secure-the-love-of-a-woman idea, but I still find most of the writing stunning. Some of it was seen as experimental, at the time, trying to get at how to represent man-thinking/consciousness, and anecdotes/slice-of-life ala Chekhov. Some of the stories, stripped down minimalist and at the same time lyrical, are wonderful.
***** "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" was first published in 1936 and though was written in his late thirties, already has a tired-of-life quality . Harry, the main character, has gangrene and is occasionally delirious, mean to his wife, a rich woman. Hyenas and vultures hovering. End-of-life stream of consciousness memories.
“That in some way he could work the fat off his soul the way a fighter went into the mountains to work and train in order to burn it out of his body.”
“He had never quarreled much with this woman, while with the women that he loved he had quarreled so much they had finally, always, with the corrosion of the quarreling, killed what they had together. He had loved too much, demanded too much, and he wore it all out.”
“It was not so much that he lied as that there was no truth to tell.”
***** "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" first published in 1933, is one of my all-time favorites and one of his most despairing/empathetic stories, featuring an old man who comes in every night to drink himself to closing, and one waiter who reveals he is sympathetic to him. There is a nihilist Lord’s Prayer, existentialist, Our nada who art in nada.
**** "A Day's Wait" is a short story probably based on Hem’s own life, where his son feared he would die based on a mis-reading of his fever in Celsius vs. Fahrenheit.
**** "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio" first published in 1933, is weird, I had forgotten it, about a Mexican gambler and a nun that loves Notre Dame football and a guy like Hem who had been hospitalized watching it all. Not my fave but well-written.
***** "Fathers and Sons" features Hemingway's Nick Adams and his father and grandfather. Papa is at his most romantic--lyrical and spiritual--when writing about the outdoors, maybe especially fly fishing.
**** "In Another Country" is an earlier story, 1927, also a Nick Adams injury story (Hem had been injured when he was an ambulance driver in Italy). About courage, has lyrical writing as in A Farewell to Arms. Shorter, but still fine.
***** "The Killers" is also an earlier story, 1927, also a Nick Adams story set in the Chicago area, maybe even (one time home of many gangsters) Oak Park? I had heard he may have drafted a version of this when he was a student at Oak Park High School, in the noir fashion, about two thugs who come into a diner looking to kill Ole Anderson. Nick tries to warn Ole, but Ole is hopeless, resigned. Bleak noir story, mostly dialogue, wonderful.
**** "A Way You'll Never Be" has Nick Adams in a hospital with a head injury, sometimes delirious, clearly brain-injured. Captures this state very well, scarily, tragi-comic. Maybe not great, but the idea is how to capture the mind thinking.
***** "Fifty Grand" is another early noir story that reminds me of Ring Lardner and Bukowski, a story about Jack, a boxer who just wants to quit, and some corrupt guys who want him to throw the fight. Twisty cool ending. Great sports story.
**** "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber." So we know from the title what happens, basically. Beautifully written but dwells too much on the code of kill to show a woman you are brave so she will love you. Macomber runs when a lion shows up, so the relationship is over. . .. or is it? Rich lady Margot is the heartless wife, and professional hunter Robert Wilson represents Hem and his moral rules for manly conduct, eh. “Doesn’t do to talk too much about it. Talk the whole thing away.” But it is still a great story on many levels. Has redemption in it, even if I don’t agree with the terms for the redemption.