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1[[quoteright:263:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a_farewell_to_arms_9780684801469_lg.jpg]]
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3Creator/ErnestHemingway's second novel, written in [[PointOfView first-person]] narration, published in 1929, and [[WriteWhatYouKnow semi-autobiographical]].
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5Frederic Henry, a volunteer American ambulance driver, serves in Italy during UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Whilst abroad, he meets British nurse [[SatelliteLoveInterest Catherine Barkley]] and becomes attracted to her. He gets a chance to consummate his attraction to her after being wounded at the front and [[FlorenceNightingaleEffect shipped back to hospital]]. By the end of the summer, Catherine is three months pregnant. Once healed, Frederic returns to the front just in time for it to collapse and the Austro-Hungarians to come pouring through; he, like the other officers, are rounded up by the [[SecretPolice "battle police"]] to be [[YouHaveFailedMe executed for the defeat]]. Frederic escapes through some quick badassery and reunites with Catherine, whereupon the two escape to Switzerland in a rowboat. There they maintain an isolated but idyllic existence until Catherine goes into labor. The baby is stillborn. Catherine hemorrhages and dies. The end.
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7Hemingway was [[TrueArtIsAngsty not a happy man]].
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9Besides many characters being based on [[WriteWhoYouKnow people the author knew]], this novel is useful to Hemingway scholars as it provides the first incarnations of the famed Hemingway "code hero". MainCharacters in Hemingway novels would continue in this vein throughout most of his body of work.
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11The novel is considered one of the great classics of American fiction, and [[MediaNotes/SchoolStudyMedia chances are that if you attended an American high school, you read it there]]. (This just highlights one of the downsides of Hemingway's [[BeigeProse "iceberg theory"]] of fiction: it relies on {{Subtext}}, which, depending on your age and/or maturity level, you might not get.)
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13The novel has been adapted for film and television several times. [[Film/AFarewellToArms The 1932 version]], directed by Creator/FrankBorzage and starring Creator/GaryCooper and Helen Hayes, was nominated for Best Picture and won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward for cinematography. A 1957 version was directed by Charles Vidor and starred Creator/RockHudson and Creator/JenniferJones.
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15The book's copyright will expire on January 1st, 2025, at which point it will enter the PublicDomain.
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17----
18!!Tropes featured in ''A Farewell to Arms'' include:
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20%% Zero-Context Examples are not allowed on this wiki. All such examples have been commented out. Please add context to these examples before uncommenting them.
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22* AccentInterest: The general paranoia and chaos during the Italian army's retreat has people believing that Austrian agents have infiltrated the army. Frederic is arrested as a spy because he speaks Italian with an accent--as does the military policeman arresting him (as he points out to no avail) as most Italians were more familiar with their local dialect.
23* TheAlcoholic: Fredreric drinks ''a lot''.
24* ArcSymbol: The frequent use of rain throughout the novel. Such as Catherine saying she's "afraid of the rain because sometimes I see me dead in it," and of course, it's a rainy day when [[DeathByChildbirth the]] [[DownerEnding ending]] happens.
25* BeigeProse: Hemingway's SignatureStyle of using as few words as possible to describe something is in full display here. This novel is arguably the TropeCodifier for Hemingway's distinctive bare-bones style of narration. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Hemingway's narration is also considered to be highly effective here.]]
26* BookEnds: Rain and death
27* BorderCrossing: Frederic and Catherine escaping to Switzerland in the end of the novel. They cross the border by boat, but are soon captured by Swiss police and taken to the station.
28* BrokenAce: Frederic Henry is probably one of the most straightforward examples of TheAce in Hemingway's bibliography, bordering on TestosteronePoisoning, yet he still can't find happiness after he leaves the war behind, as symbolized by the major DownerEnding of Catherine and his child's death.
29* CourtMartialed: The fate of Frederic and other officers for losing their troops; they're assumed to be deserters and sentenced to death on the spot.
30* CrapsackWorld: Pretty much the book's viewpoint, as mentioned in the quote below:
31-->''The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry.''
32* DeathByChildbirth: Catherine hemorrhages to death after she loses the baby.
33* TheDiseaseThatShallNotBeNamed: Subverted, kind of. It's suspected that Rinaldi has contracted syphilis.
34* DownerEnding: Frederic loses both his love and his child at the end.
35* FlorenceNightingaleEffect: Catherine falls for Frederic as she treats him.
36* ImportantHaircut: Frederic letting his beard grow during his idyll in Switzerland.
37* KangarooCourt: The drumhead court martial Italian military policemen held to judge officers who were behind their troops was this; in one case, the officer was just insulted before being shot. Frederic barely missed execution.
38* LovableSexManiac: Rinaldi
39* SecondLove: Catherine had a former fiance that died.
40* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: Frederic naturally takes offense at being arbitrarily sentenced to death and decides to desert the Italian army.
41* SickeninglySweethearts: Frederic and Catherine are pretty annoying.
42-->'''Catherine''': Your temperature's always normal. You've such a lovely temperature.\
43'''Frederic''': You've got a lovely everything.\
44'''Catherine''': Oh, no. You have the lovely temperature. I'm awfully proud of your temperature.\
45'''Frederic''': Maybe all our children will have fine temperatures.
46* TheStoic: Frederic Henry is one, relates to the world in a largely physical manner, he has trouble not being a JerkAss sometimes, and his thoughts revolve around girls and drink.
47* TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth: Frederic can only assume this is why Catherine and their child have died.
48-->The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry.
49* TooHappyToLive: Frederic and Catherine have such a bright future together, until she dies at the end.
50* TrainEscape: Frederic escapes execution on one.
51* UndignifiedDeath: The RedShirt mechanic who dies when Henry is injured in the beginning of the book. Blown apart while eating cheese.
52* VerbalTic[=/=]CatchPhrase: Rinaldi always calls Henry "baby"
53* WarIsGlorious: Utterly averted. Although there are numerous moments throughout the book that serve to mock the idea, the one that takes the cake has to be when Henry [[SkewedPriorities risks his life to get some cheese to eat with his pasta]], and then is subsequently nearly blown to pieces along with the rest of his mechanics while eating it.

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