The Old Man and the Sea is a short novel novella about an elderly Cuban fisherman who goes out alone in a small boat and hooks into a huge marlin Publication The Old Man and the Sea was first published in Life magazine in its issue of September Charles Scribners Sons published the book in New York City later in the same year An immediate success it the Pulitzer Prize and helped Hemingway the Nobel Prize for literature |
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Source Ernest Hemingway is believed to have based the plot of the Old Man and the Sea on a story he recounted in On the Blue Water a Gulf Stream Letter an article he published in the April issue of Esquire magazine In this article Hemingway recalls a conversation he had wih a friend who thought the most exciting sport for outdoorsmen was hunting elephants As for fishing Frankly I cant see where the excitement is in that he said In an attempt to enlighten his friend about the challenges of fishing at sea Hemingway told him the follog story Publication The Old Man and the Sea was first published in Life magazine in its issue of September Charles Scribners Sons published the book in New York City later in the same year An immediate success it the Pulitzer Prize and helped Hemingway the Nobel Prize for literature Source Ernest Hemingway is believed to have based the plot of the Old Man and the Sea on a story he recounted in On the Blue Water a Gulf Stream Letter an article he published in the April issue of Esquire magazine In this article Hemingway recalls a conversation he had wih a friend who thought the most exciting sport for outdoorsmen was hunting elephants As for fishing Frankly I cant see where the excitement is in that he said In an attempt to enlighten his friend about the challenges of fishing at sea Hemingway told him the follog story Characters Santiago Proud old Cuban fisherman He knows well the sea and its creatures and is expert in his trade But he has a long slump in which he fails to catch a single fish There is talk that he is no longer up to the task of deepsea fishing However he refuses refuses to yield to old age and bad luck and continues to go out in his skiff if only to prove that he can still reel in a big one Santiago a Spanish name means St James in English Eightyfour days pass and still Santiago has not caught a fish in the familiar waters of the Gulf of Mexico north of his seacoast village in Cuba Has old age robbed him of his oncegreat s Is he just having bad luck Will his scarred hands ever again pull in a prize catch |
will let go all in here
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His boat is empty not only of fish but also of his friend Manolin Santiago had taught the boy to fish.
beginning when the boy was just five He showed Manolin all the subtleties of the art and Manolin was deeply grateful More than that he loved the old man Often he would take food to Santiago and they would talk baseball usually discussing the exploits of the great Yankee center fielder Joe DiMaggio
Who played magnificently even when bothered by a physical ailment DiMaggio was operated on in to remove a bone spur from the heel of his left foot He also developed a bone spur in his right foot and sometimes dislocated his shoulder during games Whenever Santiago went out to fish Manolin would go with him happily and excitedly But after the first days of Santiagos day slump the boys parents ordered him to go out with one of the other fishing boats Santiago was bad luck a defeated old man
When necessary then holds fast to it sometimes wrapping it around his shoulders The give and take goes on and on Santiagos left hand cramps up but he is determined to stay with the fish which he respects as a worthy opponent even though he has only the tuna and his water bottle to sustain him As the sun sets the fish heads farther out to sea When it finally surfaces Santiago beholds the fish a gigantic marlin that is longer than his boat The struggle reminds the old man of an armwrestling match he it lasted through an entire day and night He eats part of the tuna he caught wraps the line around himself and sleeps awhile dreaming of Africa and those lions on the beach But the sleep is brief a mere k of his heavy eyelids
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