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The Garden of Eden | Techniques/Literary Precedents

For the most part, the techniques Hemingway employs in this novel will be familiar to readers of his earlier work. For example, one constant in Hemingway's fiction is his precise, carefully disciplined and economical, understated prose, which is far more than a mere matter of reportorial accuracy. The taut complexity of his style is closer to poetry than it is to the reporter's task of "telling it like it is." Attentive readers will see how his prose has "the dignity of movement of an iceberg" which, as Hemingway said, "is due to only one-eighth of it being above water." This controlling...

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