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Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Hemingway
Earl Theisen, 1953

Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Hemingway did more to change the style of English prose than any other writer of his time. Publication of The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms immediately established Hemingway as one of the greatest literary lights of the twentieth century. As part of the expatriate community in 1920s Paris, the former journalist and World War I ambulance driver began a career that led to international fame. Hemingway was an aficionado of bullfighting and big-game hunting, and his main protagonists were always men and women of courage and conviction who suffered unseen scars, both physical and emotional. He covered the Spanish Civil War, portraying it in the novel For... Read full bio

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    1. Ernest Hemingway's Son and Grandson Discuss the Restored Edition of A Moveable Feast
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    2. Ernest Hemingway: A Moveable Feast
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Jan 04, 2013
Hemingway on Hunting will be released on December 11, 2012 in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
Hemingway on Hunting is now available in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
Hemingway on Fishing will be released on December 11, 2012 in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
Hemingway on Fishing is now available in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
Hemingway on War will be released on December 11, 2012 in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
Hemingway on War is now available in Hardcover, eBook
Dec 11, 2012
The Ernest Hemingway Audiobook Library will be released on November 20, 2012 in Compact Disk
Nov 20, 2012
The Ernest Hemingway Audiobook Library is now available in Compact Disk
Nov 20, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from The Torrents of Spring
Oct 24, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT
Oct 14, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from Across the River and into the Trees
Oct 14, 2012
Excerpt:
Chapter 1 from A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition
Sep 06, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from GREEN HILLS OF AFRICA
Aug 30, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from Winner Take Nothing
Aug 30, 2012
Excerpt:
Excerpt 1 from DEATH IN THE AFTERNOON
Aug 30, 2012

Authors on the Web

Roanoke Times, April 19, 2013
...community including such cutting-edge artists as Pablo Picasso, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, Cole Porter and perhaps most significantly, Ernest Hemingway. Though Scott initially took the role of mentor to the younger but worldlier writer, Hemingway soon...
Medford Mail Tribune, April 19, 2013
...for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Medford is a moveable feast." ? Ernest Hemingway "America is my country and Medford is my hometown." ? Gertrude Stein "There is no place on earth that makes its way more directly to the soul than...
Poughkeepsie Journal, April 19, 2013
..._ If Ernest Hemingway himself suggested that writers compose drunk (but edit sober), I see no reason why you cant read with a beer buzz. The Spotty Dog in Hudson seems to agree...
NPR, April 19, 2013
...novel, is privy to a secret language of flowers that dates to Victorian England. follows the life of Ernest Hemingway's first wife, Hadley, as she navigates 1920s Paris. When two skittish pregnant girls appear on his homestead, solitary orchardist...
Broadway World, April 18, 2013
...to hear the story in their own words - drawn from their novels and commentary from intimates like Ernest Hemingway and others. Their edgy union, challenged by traumatic breakdowns and critical failures, found its best expression in their final letters,...
Abu Dhabi National, April 18, 2013
...oafishness. She recognises very early in the piece that Scott Fitzgerald is frittering his considerable talents away. Interestingly, Ernest Hemingway stalks Fowler's largely enjoyable historical fiction. It is he, surprisingly, who ties his literary...
Allaboutyou.com, April 18, 2013
...being half a shelf of other guests� left-behind paperbacks, is a room fully stocked with hard hitters like Ernest Hemingway, Graham Greene and Charles Dickens, lots of art books and nature guides as well as page-turners by PD James, Patricia Cornwell...
Melbourne Age, January 19, 2013
...we may also concede that they are not really thinking at all, only reacting intuitively as things happen. Ernest Hemingway used to say of the intelligent matadors that they had too much imagination to be brilliant with the cape. What he meant by this...
WA Today, January 19, 2013
...we may also concede that they are not really thinking at all, only reacting intuitively as things happen. Ernest Hemingway used to say of the intelligent matadors that they had too much imagination to be brilliant with the cape. What he meant by this...
Wales Online, January 19, 2013
...Kevin Feathers Swansea German Jew was the real author I REFER to Mr Christopher Short’s letter about Ernest Hemingway ("Hemingway was no war hero", You Say, January 9). He is right. Hemingway was, as is commonly known in America, a two-bit...
Melbourne Age, January 19, 2013
...we may also concede that they are not really thinking at all, only reacting intuitively as things happen. Ernest Hemingway used to say of the intelligent matadors that they had too much imagination to be brilliant with the cape. What he meant by this...
LewRockwell.com, January 18, 2013
...Left, like civil rights marchers and womens rights activists. It tracked Muhammad Ali, Malcolm X, John Lennon, and Ernest Hemingway. Few, however, were watched as closely as Martin Luther King Jr. After MLK gave his famous I Have a Dream speech, this...
TriCities.com, January 18, 2013
...said. To pass the time in the dark, Thrasher grabbed a candle, blew the dust off an old Ernest Hemingway book and settled in for the night. The temperature in his apartment dropped about a degree an hour overnight, Thrasher said, and was about 48...
TheStar.com.my, January 18, 2013
...around the city. BAGUETTES, berets and the Eiffel tower might be iconic symbols of the city that writer Ernest Hemingway described as a moveable feast. But if you ask a Parisian, hell tell you that the best way to get to know the City of Light is to sip...