
The Sun Also Rises (AmazonClassics Edition)
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Narrated by:
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Kirby Heyborne
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By:
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Ernest Hemingway
About this listen
In the aftermath of the First World War, Paris offers a liberating waystation for expatriate newspaperman Jake Barnes. Jake is a casualty of the war, and his disillusionment would be complete were it not for his relationship with the fast-living, twice-divorced Englishwoman Brett Ashley. Along with a small collection of other dissolute expats, Jake and Brett travel from the cafés of Paris to the wild fiestas of Pamplona on a desperate quest for fulfillment.
The Sun Also Rises paints a vivid portrait of a generation just beginning to grapple with the emotional and spiritual fallout of war, and it remains one of Ernest Hemingway’s most moving and captivating works.
Revised edition: Previously published as The Sun Also Rises, this edition of The Sun Also Rises (AmazonClassics Edition) includes editorial revisions.
Public Domain (P)2021 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...
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To Have and Have Not is the dramatic story of Harry Morgan, an honest man who is forced into running contraband between Cuba and Key West as a means of keeping his crumbling family financially afloat. His adventures lead him into the world of wealthy and dissipated yachtsmen who throng the region, and involve him in a strange and unlikely love affair.
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Papa wouldn't have like this recording.
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Extraordinary reading.
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Performance
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Stacy Keach brings these stories to life
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Avoid this pointless drivel
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Performance
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No previous interest in bullfighting required
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Let Nick Adams introduce you to Ernest Hemingway
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Unabridged reading by Stacy Keach
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Wish I could give it 10 stars!
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Overall
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A veteran of the Great War, Jake Barnes is both physically and emotionally wounded, leaving him unable to be intimate. Even so, he pines after Lady Brett Ashley, a promiscuous twice-divorced woman. As feelings are hurt and punches are thrown, their lives and the lives of their friends and lovers become tangled as they journey from Paris to Spain and struggle with the repercussions that come from surviving the First World War.
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Brilliantly written and superbly narrated.
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By: Ernest Hemingway
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The Sun Also Rises
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In his unforgettable first novel, Hemingway artfully illuminates the plight of the Lost Generation, weaving a poignant tale of love and loss in the aftermath of World War I. The story follows two expatriates living in Paris in the 1920s: Jake Barnes, an American war veteran and journalist, and Lady Brett Ashley, an independent Englishwoman exploring the opportunities afforded by a new era of liberated women and sexual freedom. Impotent due to an injury suffered during the war, Jake must navigate his hopeless love for Brett in a changed world of waning morality.
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Wrong performer
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Overall
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Performance
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When Ernest Hemingway died in 1961 he had nearly completed A Moveable Feast, which eventually was published posthumously in 1964 and edited by his widow Mary Hemingway. This new special edition of Hemingway's classic memoir of his early years in Paris in the 1920's presents the original manuscript as the author intended it to be published at the time of his death.
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Perfect complement-Paris Wife & Midnight in Paris
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A Farewell to Arms is a novel by American writer Ernest Hemingway, set during the Italian campaign of World War I. First published in 1929, it is a first-person account of an American, Frederic Henry, serving as a lieutenant (Italian: tenente) in the ambulance corps of the Italian Army. The novel describes a love between the American expatriate and an English nurse, Catherine Barkley.
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In Our Time (AmazonClassics Edition)
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The 1925 New York edition of Ernest Hemingway’s In Our Time trails readers through the years before, during, and after World War I. The collection’s first two stories, “Indian Camp” and “The Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife,” introduce Hemingway’s semiautobiographical character Nick Adams as a child. In total, seven stories portray the young man’s coming of age. All fourteen, including interspersed vignettes, embody the themes that Hemingway would return to throughout his career: alienation, grief, loss, and separation, as well as the regenerative powers of nature.
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a collection if short stories
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The Old Man and the Sea
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- Unabridged
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Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
The Old Man and the Sea is one of Hemingway's most enduring works. Told in language of great simplicity and power, it is the story of an old Cuban fisherman, down on his luck, and his supreme ordeal, a relentless, agonizing battle with a giant marlin far out in the Gulf Stream. Here Hemingway recasts, in strikingly contemporary style, the classic theme of courage in the face of defeat, of personal triumph won from loss.
-
-
Truly a Classic
- By Dave on 07-01-08
By: Ernest Hemingway
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- champlin
- 02-09-22
probably just me
I kept waiting for something to happen.. interesting characters I guess but they just mostly whine and bicker... oh and drink. Maybe that's the point but it kind of makes for a boring read. Maybe I just expected it too much with it being Hemingway.
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- Benedetta Agnoli
- 03-06-25
The language
Well read although a little dragging at times. Good characterization very clear, nice mix of tempos. overall pleasant and good feeling ftom it.
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- Bill G
- 07-20-24
Learning Hemingway's Style
While the dialogue was lifelike and understandable, I was underwhelmed by the story, probably because my experiences as reader are very different from Hemingway's when he wrote this.
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- Gregala
- 03-25-22
A classic work poorly narrated
The Sun Also Rises is my favorite Hemingway novel and in my top 10 overall. Unfortunately, the narrator seems utterly clueless about Jake Barnes. Barnes is smart, sad, and scarred. This narrator gives everything a goofy "gee whiz" vocal inflection, more like some rube seeing the big city for the first time than a sophisticated, cynical wounded vet turned journalist. Gave up halfway through.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Andrew Kyeremeh
- 03-20-23
Relatively subpar
The storytelling, as it usually is with Hemingway was sublime, however the content in itself lacked direction. Just many of the characters are occasionally tight in this novel the plot felt as discombobulated. Interestingly, this novel perhaps provides a view into Hemmingway’s (fictional) social desires an interests at the time
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