In tedious, anecdotal fashion, Lyttle delivers a broadside against Hemingway's Tough Guy image rather than discussing the...

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ERNEST HEMINGWAY: The Life and the Legend

In tedious, anecdotal fashion, Lyttle delivers a broadside against Hemingway's Tough Guy image rather than discussing the relationship between his life and work. In Lyttle's view, Hemingway was undeniably courageous--actively seeking out dangerous situations as sportsman and war correspondent--but also brutal, vain, petty and physically awkward. His narrative is one long digest of names, hunting and fishing tallies (""They saw deer, flushed many flocks of partridge, and even scared up a bear...they caught 64 trout...he crept to within 350 yards before killing the oldest animal with one shot,"" etc., etc.), repetitious travelogues, illnesses, clumsy accidents, and Papa's cutting comments about wives, friends, and fellow authors. Some incidents have a slapstick element--Hemingway once reached for a toilet chain and pulled a skylight down on his head--and Lyttle makes occasional wry comments (""Ernest...entertained...with elaborate stories of past adventures which were often partly true""); but readers will bog down in details, getting little sense of what Hemingway's books are like, or even what they're about. Wait for a more balanced student biography, or steer readers to Anthony Burgess's Ernest Hemingway and His World (1978) or to Rovit and Brenner's Ernest Hemingway (1986). Bibliography; b&w photos and index not seen.

Pub Date: April 1, 1992

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 160

Publisher: Atheneum

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1992

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