Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway - T. S. Matthews (review date 9 October 1929)
A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway - T. S. Matthews (review date 9 October 1929)
T. S. Matthews (review date 9 October 1929)
SOURCE: A review of A Farewell to Arms, in Hemingway: The Critical Heritage, edited by Jeffrey Meyers, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982, pp.121–26.
[In the following review, originally published in 1929, Matthews outlines Hemingway's transition in A Farewell to Arms from the realism of war to the idealism of a love story.]
The writings of Ernest Hemingway have very quickly put him in a prominent place among American writers, and his numerous admirers have looked forward with impatience and great expectations to his second novel. They should not be disappointed: A Farewell to Arms is worthy of their hopes and of its author's promise.
The book is cast in the form which Hemingway has apparently delimited for himself in the novel—diary form. It is written in the first person, in that bare and unliterary style (unliterary except for echoes of Sherwood Anderson and Gertrude...
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Criticism
- J. B. Priestley (essay date Winter 1929)
- T. S. Matthews (review date 9 October 1929)
- Robert Herrick (essay date November 1929)
- Donald Davidson (review date 3 November 1929)
- L. P. Hartley (review date 7 December 1929)
- Ford Madox Ford (essay date 1932)
- Wyndham Lewis (essay date 1934)
- Robert Penn Warren (essay date Winter 1947)
- Francis Hackett (essay date 6 August 1949)
- James F. Light (essay date Summer 1961)
- Daniel Schneider (essay date Autumn 1968)
- Floyd C. Watkins (essay date 1971)
- David L. Carson (essay date December 1972)
- Judith Fetterley (essay date 1978)
- Millicent Bell (essay date 1984)
- Robert Merrill (essay date May 1988)
- Margot Norris (essay date Winter 1994)
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- Ben Stoltzfus (essay date 1996)
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