To have and have not

262 pages

English language

Published June 3, 1996 by Simon & Schuster.

ISBN:
978-0-684-81898-6
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3 stars (12 reviews)

Set in Cuba, Key West, Florida and on the water in between, an account of the life and death of a boat captain during the dark days of the depression and prohibition.

25 editions

Review of 'To Have and Have Not' on 'GoodReads'

2 stars

I pleasurably read this book up until part three. The first two parts read like a beatific adventure tale with all the hooks and lines expected of such, it was the third part that was a sinker. I've only read Hemingway's A Moveable Feast, which I thoroughly enjoyed. This, however, was a bit loose on a thread. The pensive ending felt like a narrative filler, I think in the hands of a direct and understated style, it kind of flops. I'm not one to uphold a piece of writing just because surrounding works of an author have been acclaimed, and To Have And Have Not may very well be an acclaimed work, I don't know, but what I do know is that in the range of similar novels of its time, for me it doesn't stand up as being particularly well written. I should have approached it as a few …

Review of 'To have and have not' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

"No matter how a man alone ain't got no ... chance"

Sounds depressing, nihilistic, suicidal - throw in a lot of rum and whiskey it's obvious why the author committed.

There is a realistically and creatively depicted tender love relationship amist all the booze, bozos, and low lifes.

This is classic Hemingway style. However some of the dialogue gets a little hokey and tiresome - have a drink, take it easy, rummy, punchie, cool him, he's tight, old woman, etc.

Subjects

  • Smuggling -- Fiction
  • Caribbean Area -- Fiction