By Susan Reichert, Editor-in-Chief for Southern Writers Magazine
Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms was published back in 1929. The story was written in the World
War I era, yet readers still love reading this story. The question we want to
ask is why do readers still love reading a story written almost a hundred years
ago?
When Hemingway wrote
this novel, there were no
TV medical shows where the patient falls in love with his nurse. Although it is true, the main character was not the first patient to have a romantic interest in the nurse taking care of him.
TV medical shows where the patient falls in love with his nurse. Although it is true, the main character was not the first patient to have a romantic interest in the nurse taking care of him.
Remember, Hemingway
also had his own experiences. During WWI, he drove ambulances for the Italian
Army and on a literary note, he was in the running for the best 20th
Century American author.
“All you have to do is write one true sentence.
Write the truest sentence that you know,” says Hemingway. And that he did. His
life experiences were portrayed in his writing. They also formed him as a man.
What I like about his
writing style is the simplicity. When I was young and began reading his books,
I thought he used the same style in his different works. It made for easy
reading. And his ability to write fiction while using bits and pieces from his own
life and weaving them into his characters and story always touched me. He
inspired me to want to write.
When I started reading
his books, he was still living. He often showed up in the news reels played at
the movies before the main feature. They showed him at the bull fights; dining
with friends, who were celebrities, such as Ava Gardner, and others.
Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize in
literature in 1954. They singled out his writing style as one of his foremost
achievements.
As writers, we can look at our own writing
styles. Read some things we ‘ve written. What can we do to enhance the
possibilities that readers will enjoy reading our work a century from now?
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