The Snows of Kilimanjaro : And Other Stories

by Ernest Hemingway
The Snows of Kilimanjaro : And Other Stories  
published October 1995 by Demco Media
first published 1961
binding Unbound
isbn 060601392X   (isbn13: 9780606013925)
description Returning from a Kenyan safari in 1932, Ernest Hemingway quickly devised a literary trophy to add to his stash of buffalo hides and rhino horns. To th...more
date added
05-23-07



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Matthew
Read in April, 2008
For some strange reason, I was surprised that I liked this book. I had never had much interest in reading his short stories, mostly because I think that the short story as a medium is very hard to do well, and I have to admit that I didn't feel he was up to it.

Most of the stories are, as you might expect, about men being real men, resignedly keeping their emotions inside or dying brave deaths, which I must admit is something that Hemingway does very well. However, my favorite stories from t...more
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L.J.
10/26/07

bookshelves: belongs-on-my-shelf
Read in March, 1994
recommends it for: General reader
A very good introduction to Hemingway, probably the book I would tell non-Hemingway explorers to begin with. It gives an excellent sample of his different pallettes and one particular Africa story is such a twist and sudden ending that it I found it an instant reread. If a reader delves in this collection and doesn't find it interesting they can skip to another story, by then if Hemingway's style has not captured your tastes then you can write off any more of his works as they do not deviate fro...more
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Evil_Dead_Junkie
bookshelves: literature
Anyone looking for a good entry way into Hemingway need look no farther. This basically acts as an unofficial greatest hits. Not only do you get the wonderful and surprisingly vunerable (tho kinda misogynistic) title story, a quiet meditation on death and wasted potential. But you also get A Clean Well Lighted Place considered the greatest short story ever written by none other then James friggin Joyce, and most of the best Nick Adam's stories as well, including The Killers, Fathers and Sons, an...more
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Amy
07/29/08

Read in July, 2008
Hemingway is the masculine master of the short story. Terse and gruff, these are memorable stories ranging in subject from boxing and hunting to hospital patients. The women in these stories are a bit one-dimensional, generally described in terms of their level of attractiveness and usually not to be trusted. However, these stories are primarily about males, and for that they are complex, understated, and often funny if only in a somewhat cynical way. Fathers and sons, weak and strong, wealthy a...more
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Ali
06/03/07

bookshelves: collection-of-stories
داستان خوش ساختی ست که در فارسی یک بار در 1336 توسط شجاع الدین شفا و یک بار در 1352 توس جواد شمس به فارسی برگردانده شده است.
As much as Twin is American, Hemingway is un-American. He is the most famous narrator of "loosers but proud". He came to literature world with Nick Adams (In our Time), lived as Nick lived and died as Nick would die! Laconic but efficient, compendious but moving. Wishing for ...more
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Ellen
08/14/08

i guess i'm one of those people who thinks hemingway was at his best writing short stories. his matter-of-fact prose leaves you a little bit cold by the end of most of the novels, but it seems to work a lot better in the short stories. i love the mini-portraits of life in different places and at different times that you can find in these. maybe it's because i read into what isn't being said, which is harder to do in a more developed narrative, but i think it might just be that somehow there's...more
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Johnny
03/02/08

Sadly many of these stories have been extracted and used in sophomore HS English classes as some introduction to short story writing. These stories, in particular the title tale, deserve a better fate than crude photocopying and bored students' smiley faces in the margins. My advice: read the stories as if they were a novel. Read them through and appreciate the less-acknowledged versatility of our Hemingway, our American treasure who is more than a man who killed himself in an interesting way...more
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Dustin
03/20/08

Almost as good as the Nick Adams stories, well probably better but somehow for me Nick Adams captured the essence of my wandering soul. Anyway, this is supposed to be a review of Kilimanjaro. As has been said time and time again, Hemingway was the master of the short story. This collection represents some of his finest work. I know that most of us had to "endure" Hemingway in HS english. Even if you vowed never to pick up another Hemingway story again, I would eat your words and give t...more
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Woolgatherer
Read in January, 2003
recommends it for: people that want their lives taken over, completely and utterly.
this is just one of those books that takes complete control of your mind and body (in a similar way to an addictive drug).
As i was reading this book, i would limit myself to one story a night. This meant that i spent the whole day, every single waking second, waiting to get home to read another story.
in a way, i was happy when i finally finished all the stories. It was like getting over a hard-drug addiction: I finally had my life back.
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Beav
03/05/08

Read in March, 2008
A great reintroduction to Hemingway. Great character building in such short pages. I enjoyed most of the stories, and loved some. I'd recommend this book to anyone thinking about starting to read the author. Hemingway can get me into his story so much that i lose track of time and all of a sudden its an hour later. With this book, it was more like 20 mins later since it is all short stories. GREAT!
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Kathy
07/06/08

Maybe you had to read some Hemingway in high school and you hated it. Maybe you think I'm a big loser because I made my family walk a mile to get to Papa's house on Key West. Maybe you love Hemingway. Treat yourself to this collection of short stories. It's fabulous. And perhaps I wouldn't feel quite like this had I not had Joe Pici for a teacher at UD. Thank you, Joe. It's just a nick, Adams. ..
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Amberly
Sure, he's serious as a glass of whiskey and dead-on as a firearm, but it is his more-than-astute observations that cut my core.

Knowing he will perish, he muses that he "would never write the things he had saved to write until he could write them well."

And upon placating his wife with false terms of endearment: "He slipped into the familiar lie he made his bread and butter by."
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Rob
05/01/08

bookshelves: anthology, unfinished
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: Hemingway neophytes
Perhaps this is heresy but... I just don't find Hemingway's work to be all that interesting. It just seems like macho tough guy bullshit and maybe-just-maybe there is something humanized and vulnerable deep down in there but I'm not so sure.

Were we talking about mortality?
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Robert
05/09/08

Read in March, 1962
I really liked this when I read the stories many years ago. Then I listened to them on audiotape in the nineties. I can't imagine short stories with the power to affect me more. Now I realize how flawlessly written they are.

One critic quite a while back described "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" as the best short story ever written. I couldn't disagree.
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Karl
01/11/08

ratings for short story collections are a little silly.

Mostly this rating was for "A clean, well lighted place" since that story moved me more than any other in this collection. It took me a long time and a lot of Hemingway to really enjoy his style of writing. But I'm a believer today and when he's on his game it is some of the best writing I've experienced.
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Edy
11/22/07

Read in February, 2003
Membaca karya sastra Ernest Hemingway, kayaknya harus disertai dengan kening berkerut untuk menangkap makna yang dari kalimat yang ada. Aku baca versi bahasa Indonesianya. Itu pula yang mungkin membuatku agak sulit memahami makna kata-katanya karena terkadang buku asli bahasa Inggrisnya ternyata lebih mudah dipahami daripada terjemahan bahasa Indonesianya.
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Faith
09/23/07

bookshelves: classics
I didn't actually read this particular book...but I couldn't find a book that was just The Snows of Kilimanjaro.

Anyways, I call books like this "swirly" in my head...meaning that they are confusing and should generally be read a second time. Plus, it was Hemingway and therfore depressing...but not as depressing as I thought it'd be.
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Michael
bookshelves: fiction
Read in April, 2008
I had read this before and enjoyed the short stories. Most if not all of these stories are in his short story book. The Snows of Kilimanjaro is the best story of them all. Hemingway's father committed suicide and the story Fathers and Sons alludes to this. I guess it was a cross he carried all his life until he took his own life.
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Jordan
11/04/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: dudes and chicks
Solid collection of short stories. I enjoyed "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" and "Fifty Grand" probably the most, but thought the whole thing was pretty decent. Certainly the terse style on top of the already short story format makes some of the reading a little less than enjoyable, in that it's almost over too quickly.
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Pa
08/04/08

This collection of short stories showcases all of Hemingway's trademarks: the lean and polished prose; the sharp, efficient dialogue; the beautiful depiction of nature (here Africa); and the dramatic, poignant ending which perfectly suits the short story form. The first and last stories are definitely the best.
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.91 (2586 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 4.00 (2 ratings)
number of reviews: 103






other editions

The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories (Scribner Classics)
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
The Snows of Kilimanjaro (Paperback)