Description

Book Synopsis
A compelling and authoritative reading of Hemingway's final collection of short stories

Written in 1933 and one of Hemingway's lesser-known books, Winner Take Nothing was his third and final collection of short stories. These stories are about loners and losers and misfits and ne'er-do-wells. Its characters are ill, tortured, maligned, and frustrated by Hemingway's world. Like the characters it depicts, Winner Take Nothing is likewise a misfit in Hemingway's career, a volume of short stories that, as of this writing, is not even in print. Its more popular predecessors, In Our Time (1925) and Men without Women (1927),are held up as iconic collections in the American short story tradition. The grotesqueries of these 14 stories are outcasts in Hemingway's corpus and have been neglected virtually from the beginning. Editors Cirino and Vandagriff recover an underrated work that still reflects contemporary concerns.

Through line-by-line annotations and accompanying commentary, this book weaves together the biographical, historical, and cultural threads of one of Hemingway's more overlooked works, thus providing much needed guidance for Hemingway scholars and general readers alike.

Included in this Collection:

  • Introduction-Mark Cirino and Susan Vandagriff
  • "After the Storm"-Kirk Curnutt
  • "A Clean Well-Lighted Place"-Alberto Lena
  • "The Light of the World"-Bryan Giemza
  • "God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen"-Suzanne del Gizzo
  • "The Sea Change"-Carl Eby
  • "A Way You'll Never Be"-Mark Cirino
  • "The Mother of a Queen"—Krista Quesenberry
  • "One Reader Writes"-Robert W. Trogdon
  • "Homage to Switzerland"-Boris Vejdovsky
  • "A Day's Wait"—Verna Kale
  • "A Natural History of the Dead"-Ryan Hediger
  • "Wine of Wyoming"-Susan Vandagriff
  • "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio"-Nicole J. Camastra
  • "Fathers and Sons"-Donald A. Daiker


Trade Review
An indispensable guide to the brutal, lonely, and overshadowed world of Winner Take Nothing."—Michael Von Cannon, cocreator and producer of One True Podcast

"Cirino and Vandagriff provide a history of the collection's reception and excellent historical context. The scholars they have assembled continue to provide critical receptions historical context, and add thoughtful annotations to each story. While the characters may win nothing, readers of this collection will open a scholar's treasure chest as they read again Hemingway's stories."—Larry Grimes, coauthor of Reading Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea

"It's wonderful to have Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing joining the distinguished Reading Hemingway series. These stories, some neglected, have long needed the attention they now get and up-to-date interpretations. This volume does so with a series of distinguished Hemingway scholars." —Peter L. Hays, professor emeritus, University of California, Davis, and author of Teaching Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises and Fifty Years of Hemingway Criticism

Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing: Glossary

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    A Paperback / softback by Mark Cirino, Susan Vandagriff

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      View other formats and editions of Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing: Glossary by Mark Cirino

      Publisher: Kent State University Press
      Publication Date: 01/06/2021
      ISBN13: 9781606354230, 978-1606354230
      ISBN10: 160635423X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A compelling and authoritative reading of Hemingway's final collection of short stories

      Written in 1933 and one of Hemingway's lesser-known books, Winner Take Nothing was his third and final collection of short stories. These stories are about loners and losers and misfits and ne'er-do-wells. Its characters are ill, tortured, maligned, and frustrated by Hemingway's world. Like the characters it depicts, Winner Take Nothing is likewise a misfit in Hemingway's career, a volume of short stories that, as of this writing, is not even in print. Its more popular predecessors, In Our Time (1925) and Men without Women (1927),are held up as iconic collections in the American short story tradition. The grotesqueries of these 14 stories are outcasts in Hemingway's corpus and have been neglected virtually from the beginning. Editors Cirino and Vandagriff recover an underrated work that still reflects contemporary concerns.

      Through line-by-line annotations and accompanying commentary, this book weaves together the biographical, historical, and cultural threads of one of Hemingway's more overlooked works, thus providing much needed guidance for Hemingway scholars and general readers alike.

      Included in this Collection:

      • Introduction-Mark Cirino and Susan Vandagriff
      • "After the Storm"-Kirk Curnutt
      • "A Clean Well-Lighted Place"-Alberto Lena
      • "The Light of the World"-Bryan Giemza
      • "God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen"-Suzanne del Gizzo
      • "The Sea Change"-Carl Eby
      • "A Way You'll Never Be"-Mark Cirino
      • "The Mother of a Queen"—Krista Quesenberry
      • "One Reader Writes"-Robert W. Trogdon
      • "Homage to Switzerland"-Boris Vejdovsky
      • "A Day's Wait"—Verna Kale
      • "A Natural History of the Dead"-Ryan Hediger
      • "Wine of Wyoming"-Susan Vandagriff
      • "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio"-Nicole J. Camastra
      • "Fathers and Sons"-Donald A. Daiker


      Trade Review
      An indispensable guide to the brutal, lonely, and overshadowed world of Winner Take Nothing."—Michael Von Cannon, cocreator and producer of One True Podcast

      "Cirino and Vandagriff provide a history of the collection's reception and excellent historical context. The scholars they have assembled continue to provide critical receptions historical context, and add thoughtful annotations to each story. While the characters may win nothing, readers of this collection will open a scholar's treasure chest as they read again Hemingway's stories."—Larry Grimes, coauthor of Reading Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea

      "It's wonderful to have Reading Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing joining the distinguished Reading Hemingway series. These stories, some neglected, have long needed the attention they now get and up-to-date interpretations. This volume does so with a series of distinguished Hemingway scholars." —Peter L. Hays, professor emeritus, University of California, Davis, and author of Teaching Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises and Fifty Years of Hemingway Criticism

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