In the 1930s, Ernest Hemingway wrote a series of short pieces for Esquire magazine called the “Key West Letters.” One of those pieces, the 1935 “Remembering Shooting-Flying” has an interesting premise—Hemingway claims that remembering and writing about shooting are more pleasurable than shooting itself. Or at least that he'd rather remember shooting pheasant than actually shoot clay pigeons. In the next paragraph, this nostalgia for good shooting gets tied up with good books, such that the essay betrays its true desire—to be a meditation on reading. Before he catches himself and gets back on topic, Hemingway launches into a long parenthetical:

I would rather read again for the first time Anna Karenina, Far Away and Long Ago, Buddenbrooks, Wuthering Heights, Madame Bovary, War and Peace, A Sportsman’s Sketches, The Brothers Karamazov, Hail and Farewell, Huckleberry Finn, Winesburg, Ohio, La Reine Margot, La Maison Tellier, Le Rouge et le Noire, La Chartreuse de Parme, Dubliners, Yeat’s Autobiographies and a few others than have an assured income of a million dollars a year.

Is this hyperbole? Literary bluster? The genuine desire to encounter again “for the first time” the literature that transformed and widened his world? Maybe all of the above. Better to stay home and remember the greats---write about them and hope for a time when they're new again---than to fill one’s time with mediocre and forgettable books. At least that seems to be his argument. And while I'm sure you have your own lists (feel free to add them to the comments section below!), some of you may wish to take a shot at Hemingway’s and savor those works that for him overshadowed nearly every other.









To that end, we’ve compiled a list of the books he names, with links to online texts and audio, where available. Enjoy them for the first time, or read (and listen) to them once again. And remember that the texts are permanently housed in our collections of Free Book Audio Books and Free eBooks.

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy (eBook—Audio Book)

Far Away and Long Ago by W.H. Hudson (eBook—Audio Book)

Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann (eBook)

Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (eBook—Audio Book)

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert (eBook—Audio Book)

War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy (eBook—Audio Book)

A Sportsman’s Sketches by Ivan Turgenev (eBook)

The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (eBook—Audio Book)

Hail and Farewell by George Moore (eBook)

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain (eBook—Audio Book)

Winesburg, Ohio by Sherwood Anderson (eBook—Audio)

Queen Margot by Alexandre Dumas (eBook)

La Maison Tellier by Guy de Maupassant (eBook)

The Red and the Black by Stendhal (eBook—Audio Book)

La Chartreuse de Parme by Stendhal (eBook)

Dubliners by James Joyce (eBook—Audio Book)

Reveries over Childhood and Youth by William Butler Yeats (eBook)

The Trembling of the Veil by William Butler Yeats (eBook)

Related Content:

Ernest Hemingway Creates a Reading List for a Young Writer, 1934

Ernest Hemingway Writes of His Fascist Friend Ezra Pound: “He Deserves Punishment and Disgrace” (1943)

Ernest Hemingway to F. Scott Fitzgerald: “Kiss My Ass”

Neil deGrasse Tyson Lists 8 (Free) Books Every Intelligent Person Should Read

via Lists of Note

Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness