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Ernest Hemingway: Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway: The Finca Vigia (Paperback, 1987, Collier Books) No rating

I've never read any Hemingway, but I loved a lot of these short stories. His ability to have two people talk around something is impressive. These stories were also ... more modern ... than I expected. I'm often caught off guard by how modern old things can be, sometimes.

All in all, a good read and I might find my way back to one of his novels someday.

@norb I really enjoyed this collection too, and know what you mean about how modern a lot of it seems. Hemingway had a very publicly macho persona, and so when I first read him it was a little bit at arm's length expecting some of that to bleed through. I was really surprised by his actual writing about masculinity though, though I can't tell how much that is me as a reader colouring what I read with my own biases.

I definitely had this sense, especially with bull fighting (which he is absolutely obsessed with), that he was really interested in the performative aspect of masculinity, and he has so many characters who act in brash and stupid ways that cost them dearly (often with their lives) just to prove themselves as fearless or manly to other people, often other men. Two that spring to mind are the story about …