Selected Product: | Old Man And The Sea (Scribner Classics) Hardcover Author: Ernest Hemingway Publisher: Scribner Release Date: 1996-06-10 ISBN-10: 0684830493 ISBN-13: 9780684830490 List Price: $20.00 Average Customer Rating: | | For Whom the Bell Tolls ISBN-10: 0684803356 ISBN-13: 9780684803357 List Price:$15.00 The Great Gatsby ISBN-10: 0743273567 ISBN-13: 9780743273565 List Price:$14.00 Of Mice and Men (Steinbeck Centennial Edition) ISBN-10: 0142000671 ISBN-13: 9780142000670 List Price:$13.00 The Sun Also Rises ISBN-10: 0743297334 ISBN-13: 9780743297332 List Price:$15.00 A Farewell To Arms ISBN-10: 0684801469 ISBN-13: 9780684801469 List Price:$15.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Old Man And The Sea (Scribner Classics) by Ernest Hemingway (ISBN-10: 0684830493, ISBN-13: 9780684830490). At this time we have not yet written a review for Old Man And The Sea (Scribner Classics) by Ernest Hemingway (ISBN-10: 0684830493, ISBN-13: 9780684830490). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The last novel Ernest Hemingway saw published, The Old Man and the Sea has proved itself to be one of the enduring works of American fiction. It is the story of an old Cuban fisherman and his supreme ordeal: a relentless, agonizing battle with a giant marlin far out in the Gulf Stream. Using the simple, powerful language of a fable, Hemingway takes the timeless themes of courage in the face of defeat and personal triumph won from loss and transforms them into a magnificent twentieth-century classic. A Little Too Old Man | Customer Rating: | | Ernest Hemingway's Book "The Old Man and the Sea" is the story of an old man (as you can get from the title) and his experience through the sea and trying to catch the fish of his life. This book looks like a short read but, it takes a lot of will to get through this whole book. I think this is a great piece of literature but, I read it in my 8th grade class. In this class it was hard to really get into the book because, it is a book that is suppose to take only a few days and it was stretched out to two whole months. As we all know, when reading a 120 page book over two months could make anything terrible. I can see why this book is a classic piece of literature because of the simplicity but, I would not try to make children understand to read it because there are very subtle metaphors that are pretty hard to pick up. I myself did not enjoy the book for the reason that it took to long to read and Santiago (who is the old man) was not a very relatable character being so young. I would enjoy reading this book when I am older but, for anyone wanting to read this young it is a little to slow moving for the average person. | Mini-"Moby" | Customer Rating: | Hemingway apes "Moby Dick," recasting Ahab as a "black sheep" shaman who constantly yearns for his overly emotional boy slave and has self-destructive tendencies he takes out on his loved ones and those who seek to possess said loved ones. Everything is emptiness, like brainpans fried away, ornaments without luster.
At least Idaho Spud keeps his aimless ramblings brief, unlike the constipated "A Moveable Feast," in which Papa Longstocking trained a spotlight on the mundanity of social hour at the writers guild. | Well, he nailed the title . . . | Customer Rating: | This book is about an old man and the sea. Actually, it is about quite more than that - I am just not sure what. I liked the book, and I love Hemingway; and that's the attraction - the great appeal of this book for me is that it is Hemingway's style and philosophy laid bare. Hemingway was famously agnostic - to the point of seeming despair. We see that theme and message over and over again in his writing: in Robert Jordan awaiting the shutting out of his lights in "For Whom The Bell Tolls," in Frederic Henry's lonely walk away from the richness meaninglessly denied him in "A Farewell to Arms," and in the nameless, solitary old man who mumbles his rosary to nothing in "A Clean, Well Lighted Place." Your theological agreements or disagreements with Hemingway aside, his literary message was consistent, unsentimental, and stark - and always presented in the blunt narrative that he mastered and is so often unsuccessfully imitated. In "The Old Man and the Sea" the theme comes through again, this time in the situation of a little old man alone in a little old boat in the big old sea. The man, for all of his humanness, is just another contestant in nature. Most of the book is devoted to his long struggle with the great fish - and of course we see him eventually become the prey, so to spoke, as the links of the cold, unemotional, and amoral food chain pay out to take away the fruit of his hard work. I think that as an introduction to Hemingway, this book might disappoint. EH's European novels are my favorites (like "The Sun Also Rises" and the other titles mentioned), and this plot prevents him from working through the human interactions that he did so well. EH was also a master at the short story - and this book isn't one of those either. Recommended - but I would direct the EH beginner to one of the other titles mentioned. | The sea giveth...and the sea taketh away | Customer Rating: | "The Old Man and the Sea" was Ernest Hemingway's last important work. Written in Cuba in 1951 and when published, it became one of his most recognize pieces. The work won him the Pulitzer prize in 1953 and the Nobel prize in literature in 1954.
*SPOILER*
This is the story of Santiago, a poor, humble Cuban fisherman who has been down on his luck for some time i.e. no catches lately. However on this day he ventures father out to sea than usual in his tiny skiff, and hooks the biggest Marlin he's ever seen. Thus the real story begins; a battle of epic proportions, drawn out over several days, between man and fish, man and the ocean, and man and himself.
What really impressed me about this short novel was Hemingway's ability to conjure a slowly increasing sense of foreboding and fear as his hero is dragged farther and farther off-shore by his immense 'prize'. With only himself to talk to and an ever dwindling supply of water and food there is something primordial about this situation that creeps into ones subconscious. In a great book the reader will usually identify in some way with the protagonist of a story, transferring some of the fears and anxieties of the hero into the reader, making for a more 'personal' and intense experience; this book is no exception.
Conclusion: A short, spelling-binding tale that is beautifully written. 5 Stars.
Ray Nicholson
P.S. I originally read this work some time ago because, of all things, a crossword puzzle...The clue was, 'What book with six words in the title and each word having 3 letters, won a Pulitzer prize.' From there it was a mere formality that I had to read this intriguing work.
| the super old man | Customer Rating: | The Old Man and the Sea may very well become one of the true classics of this generation. Certainly, the qualities of Ernest Hemingway's short novel are those which we associate with many great stories of the past: near perfection of form within the limitations of its subject matter, restraint of treatment, regard for the unities of time and place, and evocative simplicity of style. Also, like most great stories, it can be read on more than one level of meaning. On one it is an exciting but tragic adventure story. Sustained by the pride of his calling, the only pride he has left, a broken old fisherman ventures far out into the Gulf Stream and there hooks the biggest marlin ever seen in those waters. Then, alone and exhausted by his struggle to harpoon the giant fish, he is forced into a losing battle with marauding sharks; they leave him nothing but the skeleton of his catch. On another level the book is a fable of the unconquerable spirit of man, a creature capable of snatching spiritual victory from circumstances of disaster and material defeat. On still another it is a parable of religious significance, its theme supported by the writer's unobtrusive handling of Christian symbols and metaphors. Like Coleridge's Ancient Mariner, Hemingway's Cuban fisherman is a character allowing the imagination of his creator to operate simultaneously in two different worlds of meaning and value, the one real and dramatic, the other moral and devotionally symbolic The best sentence I like in The Old Man and The Sea is a man can be destroyed but he can never be defeated. I think the old man is very super. |
|