For Whom the Bell TollsRecommendations

Author:
Ernest Hemingway
Buy on Amazon
Buy on Apple Books

About the book

In 1937 Ernest Hemingway traveled to Spain to cover the civil war there for the North American Newspaper Alliance. Three years later he completed the greatest novel to emerge from "the good fight," For Whom the Bell Tolls.

The story of Robert Jordan, a young American in the International Brigades attached to an antifascist guerilla unit in the mountains of Spain, it tells of loyalty and courage, love and defeat, and the tragic death of an ideal. In his portrayal of Jordan's love for the beautiful Maria and his superb account of El Sordo's last stand, in his brilliant travesty of La Pasionaria and his unwillingness to believe in blind faith, Hemingway surpasses his achievement in The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms to create a work at once rare and beautiful, strong and brutal, compassionate, moving, and wise. "If the function of a writer is to reveal reality," Maxwell Perkins wrote Hemingway after reading the manuscript, "no one ever so completely performed it." Greater in power, broader in scope, and more intensely emotional than any of the author's previous works, it stands as one of the best war novels of all time.

Related books

Seveneves

Neal Stephenson

The Color Purple

Alice Walker

Tenth of December

George Saunders

Stranger in a Strange Land

Robert A. Heinlein

The Little Prince

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Prophet

Kahlil Gibran

The Player of Games

Iain M. Banks

The Metamorphosis

Franz Kafka

The Unbearable Lightness of Being

Milan Kundera

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

Taylor Jenkins Reid

The Stranger

Albert Camus

The Underground Railroad

Colson Whitehead