TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT

''To Have and Have Not'' cover

'''To Have and Have Not''' is a 1937 novel by Ernest Hemingway about Harry Morgan, a fishing boat captain who runs contraband between Cuba and Florida. The novel depicts Harry as an essentially good man who is forced into blackmarket activity by economic forces beyond his control. Initially, his fishing charter Johnson skips out on the bill, forcing Harry to attempt smuggling Chinese immigrants into Florida in order to feed his family. (He double-crosses the immigrants and returns them to Cuba.) Later, he loses an arm and his boat in a shootout while running liquor into Key West. The Great Depression features prominently in the novel, forcing depravity and starvation on the residents of Key West, referred to as "Conchs."
The novel consists of two earlier short stories ("''One Trip Across''" and "''The Tradesman's Return''") that make up the opening chapters and a novella (that makes up two-thirds of the book) written later. The style is distinctly modernistic with the narrative being told from multiple viewpoints at different times by different characters. It begins in first person (Harry's viewpoint), moves to third person omniscient, then back to first person (Al's viewpoint), then back to first person (Harry's again), then back to third person omniscient where it stays for the rest of the novel. As a result, names of characters are frequently written under the chapter headings to indicate who is narrating that section of the novel.
Legend has it that Hemingway wrote the book as part of a contractual obligation and hated it. It is also claimed that he wrote the book at the Compleat Angler Hotel on Bimini, in the Bahamas.

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Film adaptations
Source

Film adaptations


The 1944 film ''To Have and Have Not'' nominally based on the novel and directed by Howard Hawks, moved the story's setting from Key West to Martinique under the Vichy regime.
The second film version, titled ''The Breaking Point'' (1950), was directed by Michael Curtiz and starred John Garfield. It shifted the action to southern California and made Garfield a former PT Boat captain.
Pauline Kael has claimed that the ending was used for John Huston's film ''Key Largo'' (1948), and that "One Trip Across" was made into ''The Gun Runners'' (1958).

Source


Pauline Kael on film adaptations: capsule review of ''To Have and Have Not'' for ''The New Yorker'', reprinted in ''5001 Nights at the Movies''.

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