Кнігаўка
And the sun rises.
And the sun rises.
Аўтар: Ernest Hemingway
Пераклад: Jurki Gavruka
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Мова: Belarusian
Старонак: 304
Год выдання: 2023
Вокладка: soft
Фармат: 120x180 mm
Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" is one of the most famous novels of the 20th century, introducing the world to the concept of the "lost generation." The work tells the story of young people who, after World War I, lost their ideals and found themselves in a world dominated by emptiness and disillusionment. Written in Hemingway's signature "telegraphic" style, the novel combines harshness with pacifist passion. Yury Haŭruk's Belarusian translation makes this work accessible and relatable for the domestic reader. The book can be ordered on Kirma.sh with worldwide delivery.
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Ernest Hemingway's famous novel "The Sun Also Rises (Fiesta)" is considered by many to be the American writer's best work. The book is published in Yury Haŭruk's translation, which first appeared in Belarusian in the distant year of 1976.
Today, after Russia's attack on Ukraine, reading Hemingway once again becomes relevant. His harsh, masculine prose with pacifist passion tells of the post-war "lost generation," young people's search for themselves in a new reality where all their previous ideals and dreams had been destroyed.
The novel "The Sun Also Rises" (also known as "Fiesta"), first published in 1926, was written by Hemingway in a few months and instantly made him famous. The work is based on real events from the author's life — his visit to a bullfight in Pamplona in 1925.
The main characters of the novel are young people who participated in the bloody battles of World War I, suffered severe traumas, and lost their previous life values and orientations. They went down in history as a cynical and disillusioned "lost generation."
Hemingway shows the disorientation of this generation in sparse prose, devoid of sentimentality and flowery expressions. Here, the author's famous "telegraphic" style is clearly evident. The writer hardly develops the inner life of the novel's main characters. By concealing key details of their mental and emotional state, Hemingway conveys the fundamental emptiness of the emigrants' lives.
