Hemingway embraced the full spectrum of emotion, from ecstasy to suicidal despair, and the people closest to him sometimes paid dearly for loving him. Did he hate women? Individually, probably ...
Scholars and writers explore some of the complicated narrative themes from Hemingway's writing and legacy. Learn more about the women who married Ernest Hemingway - and who they were before and ...
Campaign to ‘Decolonize’ Shakespeare’s Hometown Exposes DEI’s Double Standards Ernest Hemingway: A New Life by James M. Hutchisson (Penn State University Press, 320 pp., $37.95) Norman ...
Recently uncovered letters from Ernest Hemingway offer an intimate glimpse into the famed author’s personal life, revealing ...
Ernest Hemingway wore many hats in his enigmatic lifetime. He was a writer, a fisherman, a bon vivant, an expat, a father, a husband four times over and a philanderer. He was also, as evidenced by ...
Ernest Hemingway was fascinated by death. He actively sought out experiences that would allow him to become intimate with death and dying, from his presence on every major warfront during his ...
Hemingway’s awareness of race and difference began at an early age as he spent his summers as a youth vacationing with his family at a Northern Michigan cabin on Walloon Lake. Here, his father ...
Ernest Hemingway was and is arguably the most masculine of American writers. From the little boy who defiantly proclaimed he was “’fraid of nothing” to the young man impatient to join a war ...
Patrick Hemingway was the second son of Ernest Hemingway, and the author's first child with second wife Pauline Pfeiffer. Patrick was affectionately known within the family as "Mouse," a nickname ...