[I cannot express to you how glad I am that I am taking this class. I am thoroughly
enjoying
Hemingway. The Sun Also Rises is one of the best books I've read in quite a long time.
For a
while there, I was, for God knows what reason, taking Physics and Chemistry and Biology.
It is
really an adventure to be back with books and words and reading. I am also amazed that I
never
could read more of Him when it wasn't an assignment. And how is it that when I am told to
write
"a 3-5 page essay" I can only come through with two-and-a-half, but a "one-page
response"
always wants to be twenty pages long?]
I finished reading SAR around ten o'clock tonight. I could have taken it all in one big
gulp when I
began a week ago, but I couldn't do that. It wanted me to bring it out slowly, so I often
found
myself reading five or ten pages and laying it aside to absorb without engulfing. A man
gets used to
reading Star Wars and pulp fiction and New York Times Bestsellers and forgets what
literature is
until it slaps him in the face. This book was written, not churned out or word-processed.
Again, I
thoroughly enjoyed reading.
I never noticed it until it was brought up in class, maybe because it wasn't a point for
me in In Our
Time, but He doesn't often enough credit quotations with, ",he said," or, ",said Brett,"
or, ",Bill
replied." In SAR it stood and called attention to itself. I wasn't particularly bothered
by His not
telling me who said what, but it was very...pointed. I first noticed around the hundredth
page or
so. Then I realized I couldn't keep track of who was speaking. By not dwelling on it,
though, sort
of (hate to say this) accepting it, I managed to assign speech to whomever I felt was
speaking.
Gradually I came to enjoy it, in another plane of reading, figuring out from whom words
were
originating. To not notice it, as if it were one of those annoying 3-D posters that you
can't see until
you make a concerted effort not to try and see, became simple - much like those 3-D
pictures are
once you know what not to look for. (I abhor ending sentences with prepositions...)
His not telling was heightening to the story. It made things come even more alive. As a
conversation that you're hearing at a nearby table in a restaurant, the exchanges flowed,
with me
as a more passive reader than in a story written to be read instead of lived. It has
always been
troubling for me to read a book with the knowledge that there are things I am supposed to
be
catching, but not quite. The fish in the pools and the allegory and analogy and symbolism
aren't
fond of me. Trying to see that the bull-fighters and their purity or lack and how it
relates to Him as
a writer surrounded by a universe of new fiction printed for the masses, that is all fine
and well.
The short sentences, the lack of qualifying, "he said"s and "she saids" and such, the
tragedy of his
love for Brett, those are the things I enjoy reading. Those are the reasons I read and
the reasons a
man like Him writes. There are stranger things, Horatio...or something like that. I
believe Paul
Simon read Hemingway at some point in his life.
Stillcrazymotherandchildreunionreneandgeorgettemagrittewith... It is a good book.
I was surprised that more was not given to the bulls. The entire story was leading to it,
and then it
was done and they were gone. Very powerful they were but fleeting. I want to go now, of
course,
to Pamplona, as I'm sure everyone who reads does after finishing. It is probably
terrrrrrrible now
with touristas and Coke and Nike all around, but I bet still beautiful. A man was killed
this year,
did you know?
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