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Sun Also Rises, The

American  

noun

  1. a novel (1926) by Ernest Hemingway.


The Sun Also Rises Cultural  
  1. (1926) A novel by Ernest Hemingway about a group of young Americans living in Europe in the 1920s. It captures the disillusionment and cynicism of the lost generation.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Immortalized in Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel “The Sun Also Rises”, the eight-day festival draws hundreds of thousands of people from across the globe each July to drink, dance and run with the bulls.

From Reuters

Propelled to international fame by Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel “The Sun Also Rises”, the eight-day festival draws hundreds of thousands of revellers from across the globe to drink, dance and race through the streets pursued by six fighting bulls.

From Reuters

Immortalized by Ernest Hemingway in “The Sun Also Rises,” the nine-day San Fermin festival sees thousands descend on northern Spain to watch participants run from bulls along an 875-metre course through narrow streets.

From Reuters

Where are the successors to “This Side of Paradise,” “The Sun Also Rises,” “The Catcher in the Rye,” “On the Road,” “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,” “Bright Lights, Big City,” “Generation X” and “Infinite Jest”? Time’s Lev Grossman blames our increasingly “multicultural, transcontinental, hyphenated identities and our globalized, displaced, deracinated lives” for why any consensus about a single voice now seems impossible.

From New York Times

Like Strether in “The Ambassadors” and Jake in “The Sun Also Rises,” the narrator of “Giovanni’s Room” will suffer from his own inability to love, thus increasing his outsider status, increasing his ability to observe others more sharply and cause pain to himself.

From The New Yorker