I like this picture because he's smiling, a rather mischievous smile, at that
My cousin and I recently discussed
Hemingway. There are few famous
writers whom I appreciate less than him. Faulkner and James Joyce, being two. I
must admit that I think the failing is mine in their cases. I simply can’t
follow their stories. John le Carré fits in that group, now that I think about it.
Henry James’
run-on sentences bring out the editor in me. I heard someone once describe him
as “chewing more than he bit off.”
Hemingway,
on the other hand, never met a complex sentence he liked. And very few compound
ones. In The Old Man and the Sea he
makes me crazy with his uninspired attributions: “and the old man said,” “and
the boy said,” “and the old man said.” But it is a good story and it’s a skinny
little book so I wasn’t frustrated with it as long as I was with James’ The Golden Bowl.
Generally
speaking, I am not interested in authors’ biographies. If I like their work
then I don’t want to know much about them, because I might not like them and
that would color my enjoyment of their work. If I don’t like their work, then
who cares about their lives?

