发表于2024-12-27
海明威短篇小说全集(英文朗读版 套装上下册) [The Complete short stories of Ernest Hemingway] pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载
海明威被誉为美利坚民族的精神丰碑,同时也是"新闻体"小说的创始人,他的笔锋一向以"文坛硬汉"著称。海明威的生平和文学生涯从一开始就争议不断。无论海明威是作为一位传奇式人物,还是作为一位作家,他以其独特的艺术风格和高超的写作技巧创造了一种简洁流畅、清新洗练的文体,净化了一代的传统文风,在欧美文学界产生了巨大的影响。《海明威短篇小说全集》汇集了海明威70篇经典短篇小说,全英文版,小32开口袋本形式装订而成,便于读者随身携带随时阅读。
欧内斯特·海明威是深受中国读者喜爱的美国著名作家,其超凡卓越的文学才华和富有传奇色彩的人生经历都广为文学爱好者所津津乐道、赞叹不已。或许你已经习读过《太阳照常升起》、《永别了,武器》、《丧钟为谁而鸣》、《老人与海》等著名中、长篇小说,本书将带我们进入海明威独具魅力的短篇小说世界。
这套《海明威短篇小说全集》共收录了海明威70篇经典短篇小说,以小32开口袋本形式装订而成,便于读者随身携带随时阅读;本书为全英文版,同时配有配套英文朗读,让读者在品读精彩文章的同时,亦能提升英文阅读水平。
欧内斯特·海明威(Ernest Miller Hemingway),美国作家、记者,被认为是20世纪著名的小说家之一。海明威的一生之中曾荣获不少奖项。他在第一次世界大战期间被授予银制勇敢勋章;1953年,他以《老人与海》一书获得普利策奖;1954年的《老人与海》又为海明威夺得诺贝尔文学奖。2001年,海明威的《太阳照样升起》与《永别了,武器》两部作品被美国现代图书馆列入"20世纪中的100部英文小说"。
01 An African Story 001
02 After the Storm 013
03 An Alpine Idyll 019
04 Banal Story 025
05 The Battler 027
06 Big Two-Hearted River (I) 036
07 Big Two-Hearted River (II) 045
08 Black Ass at the Cross Roads 055
09 The Butterfly and the Tank 069
10 A Canary for One 079
11 The Capital of the World 084
12 Cat in the Rain 096
13 Che Ti Dice la Patria? 100
14 A Clean, Well-Lighted Place 109
15 Cross-Country Snow 114
16 A Day’s Wait 120
17 The Denunciation 124
18 The Doctor and the Doctor’s Wife 136
19 The End of Something 140
20 The Faithful Bull 144
21 Fathers and Sons 146
22 Fifty Grand 156
23 The Gambler, The Nun, and the Radio 180
24 Get a Seeing-Eyed Dog 197
25 God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen 203
26 The Good Lion 208
27 Great News from the Mainland 211
28 Hills Like White Elephants 215
29 Homage to Switzerland 220
30 I Guess Everything Reminds You of Something 232
31 In Another Country 238
32 Indian Camp 244
33 The Killers 249
34 Landscape with Figures 259
35 The Last Good Country 268
36 The Light of the World 319
37 A Man of the World 326
38 The Mother of a Queen 331
39 Mr. and Mrs. Elliot 335
40 My Old Man 339
41 A Natural History of the Dead 352
42 Night Before Battle 361
43 Nobody Ever Dies 390
44 Now I Lay Me 405
45 Old Man at the Bridge 413
46 On the Quai at Smyrna 416
47 One Reader Writes 418
48 One Trip Across 420
49 Out of Season 457
50 The Porter 463
51 A Pursuit Race 473
52 The Revolutionist 478
53 The Sea Change 479
54 The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber 483
55 A Simple Enquiry 514
56 The Snows of Kilimanjaro 517
57 Soldier’s Home 540
58 The Strange Country 548
59 Summer People 606
60 Ten Indians 616
61 The Three-Day Blow 622
62 Today Is Friday 632
63 The Tradesman’s Return 636
64 A Train Trip 649
65 The Undefeated 666
66 Under the Ridge 695
67 Up in Michigan 707
68 A Very Short Story 712
69 A Way You’ll Never Be 714
70 Wine of Wyoming 726
He was waiting for the moon to rise and he felt Kibo's hair rise under his hand as he stroked him to be quiet and they both watched and listened as the moon came up and gave them shadows. His arm was around the dog's neck now and he could feel him shivering. All of the night sounds had stopped. They did not hear the elephant and David did not see him until the dog turned his head and seemed to settle into David. Then the elephant's shadow covered them and he moved past making no noise at all and they smelled him in the light wind that came down from the mountain. He smelled strong but old and sour and when he was past David saw that the left tusk was so long it seemed to reach the ground.
They waited but no other elephants came by and then David and the dog started off running in the moonlight. The dog kept close behind him and when David stopped the dog pressed his muzzle into the back of his knee. David had to see the bull again and they came up on him at the edge of the forest. He was traveling toward the mountain and slowly moving into the steady night breeze. David came close enough to see him cut off the moon again and to smell the sour oldness but he could not see the right tusk. He was afraid to work closer with the dog and he took him back with the wind and pushed him down against the base of a tree and tried to make him understand. He thought the dog would stay and he did but when David moved up toward the bulk of the elephant again he felt the wet muzzle against the hollow of his knee.
The two of them followed the elephant until he came to an opening in the trees. He stood there moving his huge ears. His bulk was in the shadow but the moonlight would be on his head. David reached behind him and closed the dog's jaws gently with his hand and then moved softly and unbreathing to his right along the edge of the night breeze, feeling it on his cheek, edging with it, never letting it get between him and the slowly moving. The right tusk was as thick as his own thigh and it curved down almost to the ground.
He and Kibo moved back, the wind on his neck now, and they backtracked out of the forest and into the open park country. The dog was ahead of him now and he stopped where David had left the two hunting spears by the trail when they had followed the elephant. He swung them over his shoulder
in their thong and leather cup harness and, with his best spear that he had kept with him all the time in his hand, they started on the trail for the shamba. The moon was high now and he wondered why there was no drumming from the shamba. Something was strange if his father was there and there was no
drumming.
David had felt the tiredness as soon as they had picked up the trail again.
For a long time he had been fresher and in better shape than the two men and impatient with their slow trailing and the regular halts his father made each hour on the hour. He could have moved ahead much faster than Juma and his father but when he started to tire they were the same as ever and at noon
they took only the usual five-minute rest and he had seen that Juma was increasing the pace a little. Perhaps he wasn't. Perhaps it had only seemed faster but the elephant dung was fresher now although it was not warm yet to the touch. Juma gave him the rifle to carry after they came upon the last pile of
dung but after an hour he looked at him and took it back.They had been climbing steadily across a slope of the mountain but now the trail went down and from a gap in the forest he saw broken country ahead. "Here's where the tough part starts, Davey," his father said.
It was then he knew that he should have been sent back to the shamba once he had put them on the trail. Juma had known it for a long time. His father knew it now and there was nothing to be done. It was another of his mistakes and there was nothing to do now except gamble.
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海明威短篇小说全集(英文朗读版 套装上下册) [The Complete short stories of Ernest Hemingway] pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载