A Farewell to Arms | Summary
Hemingway once referred to A Farewell to Arms as his version of Romeo and Juliet. Like Shakespeare’s play, the novel is a tale of tragic romance between an American Lieutenant, Frederic Henry, and a British army nurse, Catherine Barkley, that unfolds along the Italian front during World War I. Although The Sun Also Rises is comprised of three “books” of unequal length, the division serves very little dramatic purpose. By contrast, Hemingway’s second masterpiece is divided into five books that are analogous to...
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- A Farewell to Arms: Introduction
- A Farewell to Arms: Book-by-Book Summary
- A Farewell to Arms: Summary
- A Farewell to Arms: Ernest Hemingway Biography
- A Farewell to Arms: Themes
- A Farewell to Arms: Style
- A Farewell to Arms: Historical Context
- A Farewell to Arms: Critical Overview
- A Farewell to Arms: Character Analysis
-
A Farewell to Arms: Essays and Criticism
- The Theme of Disillusionment in A Farewell To Arms
- The Theme of the Undefeated in Hemingway’s Work: How Moral Values Prevail Over the Material
- Frederick Henry in A Farewell to Arms: A Character Analysis
- Hemingway’s Writing Style, War Experiences, and Themes of Identity
- Ernest Hemingway: A Farewell to Arms
- Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms: The Novel as Pure Poetry
- A Farewell to Arms: Selected Quotes
- A Farewell to Arms: Compare and Contrast
- A Farewell to Arms: Topics for Further Study
- A Farewell to Arms: Media Adaptations
- A Farewell to Arms: What Do I Read Next?
- A Farewell to Arms: Bibliography and Further Reading
- A Farewell to Arms: Pictures
- Copyright
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