For Whom the Bell Tolls

Author(s): Ernest Hemingway

Fiction - Contemporary

For Whom the Bell Tolls is a novel by Ernest Hemingway published in 1940. It tells the story of Robert Jordan, a young American in the International Brigades attached to a republican guerrilla unit during the Spanish Civil War. As a dynamiter, he is assigned to blow up a bridge during an attack on the city of Segovia.

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Author won Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954

Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in Chicago in 1899 as the son of a doctor and the second of six children. After a stint as an ambulance driver at the Italian front, Hemingway came home to America in 1919, only to return to the battlefield - this time as a reporter on the Greco-Turkish war - in 1922. Resigning from journalism to focus on his writing instead, he moved to Paris where he renewed his earlier friendship with fellow American expatriates such as Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. Through the years, Hemingway travelled widely and wrote avidly, becoming an internationally recognized literary master of his crat. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954, following the publication of The Old Man and the Sea. He died in 1961

General Fields

  • : 9780099908609
  • : Penguin Random House
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : 0.261
  • : August 1994
  • : 178mm X 110mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Ernest Hemingway
  • : Paperback
  • : New edition
  • : English
  • : 813.5
  • : 496
  • : War fiction; Modern fiction