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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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contemporaries of Twain, one must realize that all who wrote after him, did so while being compared to<br />

him in some way. Whether it be James, William Dean Howells, or any of the other in the long line of<br />

writers before Hemingway came along, they have all been measured against Twain, and if nothing else, that<br />

might be enough to cement him as the one writer, rising amongst the rest.<br />

So, has their really “been nothing as good since” Huckleberry Finn? Well, most would cite, along<br />

with Twain, Ernest Hemingway as perhaps the most important and most recognizable American writer that<br />

ever lived. With a long line of extremely popular and a whole host of awards, prizes, and honorary degrees<br />

of his own, Hemingway, some might say may have surpassed Twain in his importance. But, don’t forget<br />

how we got here. It is Hemingway that this essay has been quoting all the while and however we decide to<br />

aggrandize him; we must first admit that he himself would probably reject it.<br />

So what is it, that which separates these writers from the rest of the pack? What allows them to gain<br />

in popularity and esteem? Hemingway might suggest that it is those writers who avoid the pitfalls of being a<br />

success, which comes in the form of more responsibilities, like a family and a lifestyle, or as Hemingway<br />

himself put it in The Green Hills of Africa, “We destroy them in many ways. They make money…writers<br />

when they have made some money increase their standard of living and they are caught. They have to write<br />

to keep up their establishment, their wives, and so on.” He goes on to suggest that this is in many ways<br />

something that gets everyone and the only thing that saved Stephen Crane from being a poor writer is that<br />

“he died.” It is in this same book that Hemingway suggests that there may only be a few good writers, based<br />

on his earlier statements about Twain. He cited Henry James, Stephen Crane and Mark Twain, but refuses<br />

to classify them in any order, which suggests that, according to Hemingway, they are all equally important<br />

in terms of literary worth. But since? Perhaps the only conclusion that can be made of that statement by<br />

Hemingway is that his friend F. Scott Fitzgerald wasn’t any good, since The Great Gatsby was published in<br />

1925 and The Green Hills of Africa was published in 1935 and written about a trip he took in 1933 with his<br />

wife at the time. Ultimately, there may be little hope for a concise definition of worth in the literary world.<br />

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