biblio-excerptise:   a book unexamined is not worth having

Ernest Hemingway on Writing

Ernest Hemingway and Larry W. Phillips (ed.)

Hemingway, Ernest; Larry W. Phillips (ed.);

Ernest Hemingway on Writing

Scribner, 1984

ISBN 0684181193, 9780684181196

topics: |  how-to | writing


Ernest Hemingway's astonishing influence on American fiction has long been
recognized by literary critics and casual readers alike. His unique style, as
well as the themes he developed and the characters he created, have been
studied, analyzed, and imitated by countless writers. Throughout his life,
Hemingway maintained that it was bad luck to talk or write about his art;
nonetheless, his thoughts about the nature of writing and the writer's life
are preserved in his novels and stories; letters to editors, friends, fellow
writers, and critics; and in interviews and commissioned articles.

Larry W. Phillips has skillfully and meticulously uncovered Hemingway's
insights to create this extraordinary book. Featuring specific information on
the craft of writing, work habits, and discipline -- and imbued with
Hemingway's wit, wisdom, and humor, and insistence on the integrity of the
writer and of the profession itself -- Ernest Hemingway on Writing offers
essential advice from the author whose writing has had an astounding impact
on contemporary American fiction.


amitabha mukerjee (mukerjee [at] gmail.com) 17 Feb 2009