Ernest Hemingway published 10 novels, 7 short story collections, and 5 nonfiction works between 1926 and 1961. Winner of the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature and 1953 Pulitzer Prize, his economical style revolutionized 20th-century fiction. This complete bibliography lists all his works in chronological order.
Satirical novella parodying literary pretension. Written to break contract with publisher Boni & Liveright.
Quintessential Lost Generation novel. American expatriates travel from Jazz Age Paris to Spanish bullfights. First major novel.
WWI love story. American ambulance driver and English nurse caught in war's sweep. Based on Hemingway's Italian front experience.
Depression-era tale of Key West smuggler forced into contraband running between Cuba and Florida.
Spanish Civil War epic. American volunteer with Republican guerrillas assigned to blow bridge during assault on Segovia.
Aging colonel's final weekend in Venice. Reflection on war, love, and mortality.
Novella about Cuban fisherman's epic struggle with giant marlin. Won 1953 Pulitzer Prize. Led to 1954 Nobel Prize.
Posthumous novel. Artist Thomas Hudson across three phases: Bimini, wartime Cuba, submarine hunting. Published nine years after death.
Posthumous novel. Young American writer and wife both fall for same woman. Edited from unfinished manuscript.
Fictional memoir of 1953-54 African safari. Edited by son Patrick Hemingway from 850-page manuscript.
Literary debut. Published in Paris. Included "Up in Michigan," "Out of Season," and "My Old Man."
Breakthrough collection establishing his reputation. Includes first Nick Adams stories and famous vignettes between chapters.
Fourteen stories exploring masculinity and loss. Includes "The Killers," "Hills Like White Elephants," "In Another Country."
Fourteen stories confronting failure and alienation. Includes "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" and "The Gambler, the Nun, and the Radio."
Massive collection combining his only full-length play with comprehensive short fiction. Includes "The Snows of Kilimanjaro," "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber."
Posthumous collection uniting all Nick Adams stories in chronological sequence. Semi-autobiographical character from childhood through war to fatherhood.
Definitive collection of all published and unpublished short stories. Finca Vigía Edition with previously uncollected work.
Treatise on Spanish bullfighting exploring ritual, symbolism, and metaphors for life and death. Combines reportage with personal philosophy.
Account of month-long safari in East Africa with wife Pauline. Lyrical journal examining the hunt and African landscape.
Posthumous memoir of 1920s Paris. Portraits of Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound, F. Scott Fitzgerald. Published three years after death.
Chronicle of 1959 bullfighting season. Rivalry between matadors Antonio Ordóñez and Luis Miguel Dominguín.
Unabridged version of True at First Light. Complete account of final African safari from original 850-page manuscript.