Ernest Hemingway never wished to be widely known as a poet. He concentrated on writing short stories and novels, for which he won the Nobel Prize in 1956. But his poetry deserves close attention, if only because it is so revealing. Through verse he expressed anger and disgust t Dorothy Parker and Edmund Wilson, among others. He parodied the poems and sensibilities of Rudyard Kipling, Joyce Kilmer, Robert Graves, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Gertrude Stein. He recast parts of poems by the likes of Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot, giving them his own twist. And he invested these poems with the preoccupations of his novels: sex and desire, battle and aftermath, cats, gin, and bullfights. Nowhere is his delight in drubbing snobs and overrefined writers more apparent.In this revised edition of the
Complete Poems, the editor, Nicholas Gerogiannis, offers here an afterword assessing the influence of the collection, first published in 1979, and an updated bibliography. Readers will be particularly interested in the addition of ""Critical Intelligence,"" a poem written soon after Hemingway's divorce from his first wife in 1927. Also available as a Bison Book:
Hemingway's Quarrel with Androgyny by Mark Spilka.
Author won Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954About the AuthorNicholas Gerogiannis, a professor in the Department of International Studies at Auburn University, introduces the poems and clarifies historical and literary references in explanatory notes.
Book InformationISBN 9780803272590
Author Ernest HemingwayFormat Paperback
Page Count 171
Imprint University of Nebraska PressPublisher University of Nebraska Press