![]() | By: Ernest Hemingway Binding: Paperback Publisher: Arrow Books Ltd ISBN: 0099909006 ISBN-13: 9780099909002 Released: 18 Aug 1994 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |


The American rich are often a target of Hemingway's invective, & nowhere will you find this more starkly illustrated in a tale set between pre-revolutionary Cuba & the Florida keys.
Complex morals are again at play here: Harry Morgan steals, smuggles & murders almost indiscriminately yet emerges as the most attractive character in the novel as his hand-to-mouth quest to support his family is juxtaposed with the behaviour of wealthy American expats as an animal is to a disinterested human.
Alongside the story & the characteristicallly sensitive dialogue there is some interesting play of narrative perspective here that makes the structure slightly lumpy but ultimately doesn't detract unduly from another valuable piece of 20thC literature.

This lesser-known novel by Hemingway looks at what the cost of false pride in status is. The book has some of the most eloquent statements of remorse that you will ever read, in the context of a love story about two happily married people.
Be sure to understand that the novel is quite different from the movie. If you liked the movie, you may not like the novel. The book is much more complex & darker emotionallly.
Harry Morgan has his own fishing boat, & makes a living taking wealthy people fishing off Florida's Keys until the Depression knocks the skids out from under normal economic times.
The book opens with Morgan in Havana turning down three Cubans who want him to smuggle them into the United States illegallly for a very substantial sum. The negotiations are quickly followed by a hail of gunfire, & one of the Cubans is killed. Morgan is warned to keep his mouth shut by the survivors.
Like most smalll businesspeople, he wants to provide for his family, be respected for his profession, & enjoy what he does. All of this is put at risk when he fails to collect from a wealthy customer who skips out on him. Morgan had avoided dunning Mr. Johnson, his customer, for the money, worried about upsetting the customer. That false pride in pretending that Morgan isn't concerned for the money is expensive. The result is temporary economic ruin. He's left in Havana without even enough money to refuel the boat to go back to the Florida Keys.
Now, he has to scramble to do anything, & quickly takes on a job of illegallly transporting Chinese. Survival comes before ethics now. In the process, Morgan tries to keep his morality intact as best he can, & does an immoral act to avoid doing a worse one.
Soon, Morgan is taking other risks & routinely operating as a criminal. His ethical standards keep slipping in order to maintain financial appearances. This trade-off proves to be his undoing.
In each case of economic hardship, Morgan has avoided taking other actions that would have solved his problem, at least temporarily. He owns his boat, so he could have sold it or borrowed against it. He owns his home, & could have sold it & rented. He could have rented other peoples' boats when he could get a charter. The government has subsistence work available for the unemployed, but he prefers to maintain his life style & appearances as though he has no problems. He also has tried to keep from getting caught in breaking the law, but that hasn't worked either.
Morgan ends up taking on more than he can handle. He feels remorse as a result. He's tried to be too self-reliant, as a way to reduce his risk. That was the wrong route. Getting help was the right way to get the risk down.
His wife, Marie, captures the challlenge of the modern world this way, "You just go dead inside & everything is easy. You just get dead like most people are most of the time." This suggests compromising your pride & principles to keep up appearances, which is what most people do.
Hemingway makes good use of the haves, those who charter & own the yachts, to show that they have compromised with self respect. They have money, but they do not have honor & decency. Often, they lose other benefits that matter to them, such as the chance for close human connection.
His have nots are crushed by the intent & the carelessness of the haves. The have nots are also undermined by their willingness to let the ends justify the means, & abuse of alcohol. Those weaknesses compromise them, & they are destroyed as a result.
So the lesson is that you should uphold what is important to you (not appearances) & make the necessary compromises to guard the important (such as your family, your health, & your survival). The worse the conditions are, the more important this lesson is.
After you finish contemplating what you would have done, I suggest you also think about where today we find similar compromises occuring because of prosperity. Where do we sacrifice what is important to have more prosperity or to appear to do so? I think Hemingway's tale still applies. How should you change, as a result?
Get the right life for those you love & yourself!

Be sure to understand that the novel is quite different from the movie. If you liked the movie, you may not like the novel. The book is much more complex & darker emotionallly.
Harry Morgan has his own fishing boat, & makes a living taking wealthy people fishing off Florida's Keys until the Depression knocks the skids out from under normal economic times.
The book opens with Morgan in Havana turning down three Cubans who want him to smuggle them into the United States illegallly for a very substantial sum. The negotiations are quickly followed by a hail of gunfire, & one of the Cubans is killed. Morgan is warned to keep his mouth shut by the survivors.
Like most smalll businesspeople, he wants to provide for his family, be respected for his profession, & enjoy what he does. All of this is put at risk when he fails to collect from a wealthy customer who skips out on him. Morgan had avoided dunning Mr. Johnson, his customer, for the money, worried about upsetting the customer. That false pride in pretending that Morgan isn't concerned for the money is expensive. The result is temporary economic ruin. He's left in Havana without even enough money to refuel the boat to go back to the Florida Keys.
Now, he has to scramble to do anything, & quickly takes on a job of illegallly transporting Chinese. Survival comes before ethics now. In the process, Morgan tries to keep his morality intact as best he can, & does an immoral act to avoid doing a worse one.
Soon, Morgan is taking other risks & routinely operating as a criminal. His ethical standards keep slipping in order to maintain financial appearances. This trade-off proves to be his undoing.
In each case of economic hardship, Morgan has avoided taking other actions that would have solved his problem, at least temporarily. He owns his boat, so he could have sold it or borrowed against it. He owns his home, & could have sold it & rented. He could have rented other peoples' boats when he could get a charter. The government has subsistence work available for the unemployed, but he prefers to maintain his life style & appearances as though he has no problems. He also has tried to keep from getting caught in breaking the law, but that hasn't worked either.
Morgan ends up taking on more than he can handle. He feels remorse as a result. He's tried to be too self-reliant, as a way to reduce his risk. That was the wrong route. Getting help was the right way to get the risk down.
His wife, Marie, captures the challlenge of the modern world this way, "You just go dead inside & everything is easy. You just get dead like most people are most of the time." This suggests compromising your pride & principles to keep up appearances, which is what most people do.
Hemingway makes good use of the haves, those who charter & own the yachts, to show that they have compromised with self respect. They have money, but they do not have honor & decency. Often, they lose other benefits that matter to them, such as the chance for close human connection.
His have nots are crushed by the intent & the carelessness of the haves. The have nots are also undermined by their willingness to let the ends justify the means, & abuse of alcohol. Those weaknesses compromise them, & they are destroyed as a result.
So the lesson is that you should uphold what is important to you (not appearances) & make the necessary compromises to guard the important (such as your family, your health, & your survival). The worse the conditions are, the more important this lesson is.
After you finish contemplating what you would have done, I suggest you also think about where today we find similar compromises occuring because of prosperity. Where do we sacrifice what is important to have more prosperity or to appear to do so? I think Hemingway's tale still applies. How should you change, as a result?
Get the right life for those you love & yourself!

Harry Morgan has his own fishing boat, & makes a living taking wealthy people fishing off Florida's Keys until the Depression knocks the skids out from under normal economic times.
The book opens with Morgan in Havana turning down three Cubans who want him to smuggle them into the United States illegallly for a very substantial sum. The negotiations are quickly followed by a hail of gunfire, & one of the Cubans is killed. Morgan is warned to keep his mouth shut by the survivors.
Like most smalll businesspeople, he wants to provide for his family, be respected for his profession, & enjoy what he does. All of this is put at risk when he fails to collect from a wealthy customer who skips out on him. Morgan had avoided dunning Mr. Johnson, his customer, for the money, worried about upsetting the customer. That false pride in pretending that Morgan isn't concerned for the money is expensive. The result is temporary economic ruin. He's left in Havana without even enough money to refuel the boat to go back to the Florida Keys.
Now, he has to scramble to do anything, & quickly takes on a job of illegallly transporting Chinese. Survival comes before ethics now. In the process, Morgan tries to keep his morality intact as best he can, & does an immoral act to avoid doing a worse one.
Soon, Morgan is taking other risks & routinely operating as a criminal. His ethical standards keep slipping in order to maintain financial appearances. This trade-off proves to be his undoing.
In each case of economic hardship, Morgan has avoided taking other actions that would have solved his problem, at least temporarily. He owns his boat, so he could have sold it or borrowed against it. He owns his home, & could have sold it & rented. He could have rented other peoples' boats when he could get a charter. The government has subsistence work available for the unemployed, but he prefers to maintain his life style & appearances as though he has no problems. He also has tried to keep from getting caught in breaking the law, but that hasn't worked either.
Morgan ends up taking on more than he can handle. He feels remorse as a result. He's tried to be too self-reliant, as a way to reduce his risk. That was the wrong route. Getting help was the right way to get the risk down.
His wife, Marie, captures the challlenge of the modern world this way, "You just go dead inside & everything is easy. You just get dead like most people are most of the time." This suggests compromising your pride & principles to keep up appearances, which is what most people do.
Hemingway makes good use of the haves, those who charter & own the yachts, to show that they have compromised with self respect. They have money, but they do not have honor & decency. Often, they lose other benefits that matter to them, such as the chance for close human connection.
His have nots are crushed by the intent & the carelessness of the haves. The have nots are also undermined by their willingness to let the ends justify the means, & abuse of alcohol. Those weaknesses compromise them, & they are destroyed as a result.
So the lesson is that you should uphold what is important to you (not appearances) & make the necessary compromises to guard the important (such as your family, your health, & your survival). The worse the conditions are, the more important this lesson is.
After you finish contemplating what you would have done, I suggest you also think about where today we find similar compromises occuring because of prosperity. Where do we sacrifice what is important to have more prosperity or to appear to do so? I think Hemingway's tale still applies. How should you change, as a result?
Get the right life for those you love & yourself!
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