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The last Hemingway book I read was The Garden of Eden. To Have and Have Not has made me appreciate that last book a bit more. Comparing the books is unfair. Both are extremely different. Eden was unique. This book felt predictable, chaotic, and unrelateable. It almost felt as though it were two rough drafts thrown together. I did not like the turn of the structure near the end. I did not like the dialogue or the characters. I had high hopes after the first chapter. Even though I did not like Harry, I was interested in his fate, though his fate was evident early on. I wish I had been able to relate to him more as his actions and choices were interesting. But he practically disappeared by the end of the book. By the final third section, I could not get the insidious idea out of my head that Graham Greene could have written the story better, involving the rich and malcontent couple at least. The story lost me when they were introduced and I could have cared less about their fate. Once the Greene idea entered my head, the entire book was doomed. Even Hemingway's way with setting, the waters and fishing boats, was not enough. I had a terrible time finishing the book and can not recommend it.