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Hemingway's Faith
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Description
Mary Claire Kendall grapples with Hemingway's faith and does so commendably. She doesn't explain him or explain him away, but she does get us closer to his Catholic heart. Those wishing to know the heart of Hemingway will relish this book.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: Formed in the Protestant Heartland
Chapter 2: Medieval Truths and World War I Heroism
Chapter 3: Breaking Away and Starting a New Life
Chapter 4: The City of Light: “One True Sentence”
Chapter 5: F. Scott, Pauline, Hadley & Bumby: “The Sun Also Rises”
Chapter 6: Key West, Restless Heart: “A Farewell to Arms”
Chapter 7: A Faith Grown Tepid: “For Whom the Bell Tolls”
Chapter 8: World War II and “Black Ass”: “Across the River and Into the Trees”
Chapter 9: Faith, Tragedy and Triumph: “The Old Man and the Sea”
Chapter 10: The Final Years: “A Moveable Feast”
Bibliography
Notes
Index
About the Author
Product details
Published | 17 Dec 2024 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 256 |
ISBN | 9781538187913 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 15 BW Photos |
Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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I found Mary Claire Kendall's book riveting and full of fresh information. She has done a wonderful job of sifting through the mountain of material on Ernest Hemingway and is wisely indebted to the research of the late H. R. Stoneback, “the foremost scholar on Hemingway's Catholicism and himself a convert.”
America - The Jesuit Review
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Mary Claire Kendall grapples with Hemingway's faith and does so commendably. She doesn't explain him or explain him away, but she does get us closer to his Catholic heart. Those wishing to know the heart of Hemingway will relish this book.
Aleteia
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Our two Scribner biographies of Hemingway-the monumental Carlos Baker and the critical Anthony Burgess-ignore or, worse, dismiss the powerful if alternating current of Hemingway's adoptive Catholicism throughout his life and work. Finally, a half-century later, Mary Claire Kendall casts a beam of light through the chiaroscuro of that author's troublous life. It is quite simply the most revealing portrait of the inner-Hemingway since A Moveable Feast. Faith is a gift; this book is a treasure.
Charles Scribner III, author of Scribners: Five Generations in Publishing
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If you care about anything Ernest Hemingway has written, you will inevitably face the fact of Hemingway's Faith. While Academics are largely allergic to Faith, and with such a popular writer as Ernest Hemingway, even opposed to any discussion of his Faith, it is the central crux of all of his writing. If we consider the prominence of Hemingway as the twentieth century's most popular and influential writer, Hemingway's Faith is central to the very discussion of literature, period. The Hemingway world, the literary world, needs this book, Hemingway's Faith, now more than ever.
Matthew C. Nickel, author of Hemingway's Dark Night: Catholic Influences and Intertextualities in the Work of Ernest Hemingway; assistant professor of English at Misericordia University
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Alongside the intrinsic qualities of a meticulous study of Hemingway's life, Kendall's book is written in a tone that reflects a profound symbiosis with the spirit of the man she investigates.
One Peter Faith