The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

Ernest Hemingway’s first piece of long-form literature, The Torrents of Spring, is a satirical novella that the great American author wrote in just ten days and is a rare early example of his work.

Set in small-town America in Northern Michigan, The Torrents of Spring follows two characters: a writer, Scripps O’Neill, and a Great War veteran, Yogi Johnson. Scripps represents the small-mindedness of suburban America and repeatedly falls in love with women who claim to have knowledge of literature, whereas Yogi has fought in the First World War, experienced a severe injury, and fallen in love in Paris. Throughout the novella, Yogi struggles to fall in love with someone new, and he represents the Lost Generation of Jazz Age literature.

First published in 1926, The Torrents of Spring was intended to parody Sherwood Anderson’s Dark Laughter (1925) and the modern realists of the Roaring 20s. It is an effective satire of these styles while maintaining hidden depths of meaning. Hemingway’s novella is a highly entertaining and short book, which would make an excellent read for those who wish to begin collecting classic American literature.

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The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

Ernest Hemingway’s first piece of long-form literature, The Torrents of Spring, is a satirical novella that the great American author wrote in just ten days and is a rare early example of his work.

Set in small-town America in Northern Michigan, The Torrents of Spring follows two characters: a writer, Scripps O’Neill, and a Great War veteran, Yogi Johnson. Scripps represents the small-mindedness of suburban America and repeatedly falls in love with women who claim to have knowledge of literature, whereas Yogi has fought in the First World War, experienced a severe injury, and fallen in love in Paris. Throughout the novella, Yogi struggles to fall in love with someone new, and he represents the Lost Generation of Jazz Age literature.

First published in 1926, The Torrents of Spring was intended to parody Sherwood Anderson’s Dark Laughter (1925) and the modern realists of the Roaring 20s. It is an effective satire of these styles while maintaining hidden depths of meaning. Hemingway’s novella is a highly entertaining and short book, which would make an excellent read for those who wish to begin collecting classic American literature.

6.49 In Stock
The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

by Ernest Hemingway
The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

The Torrents of Spring: With the Introductory Essay 'The Jazz Age Literature of the Lost Generation' (Read & Co. Classics Edition)

by Ernest Hemingway

eBook

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Overview

Ernest Hemingway’s first piece of long-form literature, The Torrents of Spring, is a satirical novella that the great American author wrote in just ten days and is a rare early example of his work.

Set in small-town America in Northern Michigan, The Torrents of Spring follows two characters: a writer, Scripps O’Neill, and a Great War veteran, Yogi Johnson. Scripps represents the small-mindedness of suburban America and repeatedly falls in love with women who claim to have knowledge of literature, whereas Yogi has fought in the First World War, experienced a severe injury, and fallen in love in Paris. Throughout the novella, Yogi struggles to fall in love with someone new, and he represents the Lost Generation of Jazz Age literature.

First published in 1926, The Torrents of Spring was intended to parody Sherwood Anderson’s Dark Laughter (1925) and the modern realists of the Roaring 20s. It is an effective satire of these styles while maintaining hidden depths of meaning. Hemingway’s novella is a highly entertaining and short book, which would make an excellent read for those who wish to begin collecting classic American literature.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781528798228
Publisher: Read Books Ltd.
Publication date: 09/26/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 100
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

About The Author

The preeminent American novelist and short story writer of his time, Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) wrote provocative fiction steeped in the experiences of the "lost generation" that came of age during World War I. Hemingway's four best-known books — The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Old Man and the Sea — highlight the author's trademark economy of style while depicting lives shaped by futility, frustration, and disappointment. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954.

Date of Birth:

July 21, 1899

Date of Death:

July 2, 1961

Place of Birth:

Oak Park, Illinois

Place of Death:

Ketchum, Idaho
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