EBOOK

About
A generation searching for purpose in the aftermath of war, love, and uncertainty.
The Sun Also Rises is a defining modernist novel by Ernest Hemingway, capturing the spirit of the Lost Generation after World War I.
The story follows Jake Barnes, an American journalist living in Paris, and a group of expatriates whose lives are shaped by friendship, romance, travel, and the emotional scars of war. As they journey from Paris to Spain, their relationships become entangled with passion, jealousy, and personal struggles.
Through Hemingway's distinctive writing style, the novel explores themes of identity, disillusionment, courage, and the search for meaning in a changing world.
A landmark of 20th-century literature, The Sun Also Rises remains one of Hemingway's most celebrated works and a defining portrait of a generation navigating the challenges of modern life.
The Sun Also Rises is a defining modernist novel by Ernest Hemingway, capturing the spirit of the Lost Generation after World War I.
The story follows Jake Barnes, an American journalist living in Paris, and a group of expatriates whose lives are shaped by friendship, romance, travel, and the emotional scars of war. As they journey from Paris to Spain, their relationships become entangled with passion, jealousy, and personal struggles.
Through Hemingway's distinctive writing style, the novel explores themes of identity, disillusionment, courage, and the search for meaning in a changing world.
A landmark of 20th-century literature, The Sun Also Rises remains one of Hemingway's most celebrated works and a defining portrait of a generation navigating the challenges of modern life.
Related Subjects
Artists
Similar Artists
Alan Kaufman
Beryl Markham
Bonnie Jo Campbell
David Downie
David James Duncan
Donald L. Miller
Gertrude Stein
Graham Robb
H. R. Stoneback
John Fowles
John Irving
John Updike
Joseph Heller
Kaye Gibbons
Laura Kasischke
Naomi Wood
Noel Riley Fitch
Norman Maclean
Pauline Gedge
Raymond Carver
Robertson Davies
Saul Bellow
Sherwood Anderson
Stephen Clarke
Yann Martel