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The Old Man and the Sea

The Old Man and the Sea

6W Ernest Hemingway. London: Book Club Associates, 1972.

Notes

The Old Man and the Sea, published in 1952, is one of the most celebrated works of Ernest Hemingway. The short novel tells the story of Santiago, an aging Cuban fisherman who has endured an unusually long run of bad luck at sea. Determined to prove his strength and skill, he ventures far into the Gulf Stream where he hooks an enormous marlin, beginning an exhausting struggle between man and nature that lasts for days. Through Santiago’s perseverance, dignity, and quiet reflection, the story explores themes of endurance, pride, isolation, and the deep respect between humans and the natural world.

Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) was an American novelist and journalist known for his spare, direct prose and powerful depictions of courage and resilience. Drawing from his own experiences as a fisherman, war correspondent, and traveler, Hemingway developed a distinctive writing style often called the “iceberg theory,” in which deeper meanings lie beneath simple, understated language. The Old Man and the Sea was widely praised upon publication and played a major role in Hemingway receiving the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1953 and later the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954. The novella remains one of the most enduring works of 20th-century American literature, admired for its simplicity, symbolism, and timeless meditation on perseverance and human dignity.

Description 

Teal blue cloth binding with silver detail on upper board and lettering to spine. Original dust wrapper. Illustrations throughout. Fine condition. 

$225.00
The Old Man and the Sea—
$225.00
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Description

6W Ernest Hemingway. London: Book Club Associates, 1972.

Notes

The Old Man and the Sea, published in 1952, is one of the most celebrated works of Ernest Hemingway. The short novel tells the story of Santiago, an aging Cuban fisherman who has endured an unusually long run of bad luck at sea. Determined to prove his strength and skill, he ventures far into the Gulf Stream where he hooks an enormous marlin, beginning an exhausting struggle between man and nature that lasts for days. Through Santiago’s perseverance, dignity, and quiet reflection, the story explores themes of endurance, pride, isolation, and the deep respect between humans and the natural world.

Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) was an American novelist and journalist known for his spare, direct prose and powerful depictions of courage and resilience. Drawing from his own experiences as a fisherman, war correspondent, and traveler, Hemingway developed a distinctive writing style often called the “iceberg theory,” in which deeper meanings lie beneath simple, understated language. The Old Man and the Sea was widely praised upon publication and played a major role in Hemingway receiving the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1953 and later the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954. The novella remains one of the most enduring works of 20th-century American literature, admired for its simplicity, symbolism, and timeless meditation on perseverance and human dignity.

Description 

Teal blue cloth binding with silver detail on upper board and lettering to spine. Original dust wrapper. Illustrations throughout. Fine condition. 

The Old Man and the Sea | Moons Rare Books