The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway — book cover

Book details

The Sun Also Rises

by Ernest Hemingway

1926

About the book

Jake Barnes, an American journalist living in Paris, lives with a physical wound from the Great War that leaves him impotent. He spends his nights drinking and traveling with a group of expatriates, including the charismatic Lady Brett Ashley and the disillusioned Robert Cohn. The narrative follows them from the cafes of the Seine to the San Fermín festival in Pamplona, Spain. Against the backdrop of heavy drinking and public brawling, the characters watch professional bullfighting, which serves as a stark contrast to their own aimless lives and fragmented identities.

Students of history and literature read this book to observe the specific psychological reality of the Lost Generation. Readers gain a clear view of the behavioral shift that occurred after World War I, where traditional moral codes were replaced by cynicism and immediate sensory experience. The text provides a technical look at the "iceberg theory" of writing, leaving the reader to interpret the emotional void hidden beneath sparse dialogue and repetitive masculine rituals. It offers a blueprint of post-war alienation and the search for resilience in a broken world.

Details

Published
1926
Language
EN