Tuesday, February 22, 2011

How To Stitch Ladies Kurta




Published in 1926, Fiesta was an immediate success, placing Hemingway among the most 'admired writers Gertrude Stein's definition of what' the "lost generation". Fiesta was then a novel topical pulsing 'environments that describes (Montparnasse and Spain) and references to the stormy inquitudini a group of international migrants. A typical figure Hemingway, Jake Barnes, the "narrator" in the center of the novel, and 'an American journalist, victim of a humiliating war wound. Bored, unable to find relief from the intellectual bohemian Montparnasse, he decides to go to Spain, the festival of Pamplona, \u200b\u200bwith his friend, Bill. The two are joined by friends and "Circe" unrestrained and unhappy, who returns the unhappy love Jake, but look elsewhere comfort and pleasure. The strong suggestion of the environment (the deep beauty of Spain, the main character lives with particular passion during bullfighting and fishing on the rivers), the sleepless nights spent in noisy booze and stormy discussions, they are told with a style all stretched between news stories and poetry. The narrative is characterized, inter alia, of a dialogue that is exemplary for incisiveness' and elegance, in a letter from Hemingway to his publisher, is defined as "not a satire, but a tragedy that the hero for the earth." And 'the novel of the Lost Generation, the first declaration of love for Hemingway to Spain.
(Ernest Hemingway, Mondadori)
My opinion: one of those novels that while the university 'have filled the evenings of discussions and projects with fellow then. It was also a reason for a trip to Pamplona to assist in the footsteps of the author, the party of San Fermin. The matador was not more 'or Nicanor Villalta Manuel Garcia, but the emotions were, at least for some of us, probably the same ones that tried Jake, Bill and company. To be sure the wine was the same as that under the influence of its smoke there were some who managed 'to buy an entire encyclopedia on bullfighting. In short, a book "cult" and not only from the literary point of view.

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