Papa Hemingway Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Papa Hemingway Book

First published in 1966, this adulatory memoir made news by revealing that Ernest Hemingway's 1961 death was a suicide. It also provided the mythmaking, Nobel Prize-winning author with an opportunity to promulgate his preferred public persona from beyond the grave. Chronicling their friendship over the final 14 years of Hemingway's life, A.E. Hotchner vividly captured the writer's appeal as a man and his genius as a storyteller in extensive direct quotes. He draws from contemporary notes, tape recordings, and (he reveals in the foreword to this edition published for the Hemingway centennial) disguised excerpts from personal letters that Hemingway's widow, Mary, refused him permission to use. In conversation, Hemingway sounds like one of his own fictional heroes: terse, witty, profane, manly. Hotchner, in his mid-20s when they first met in 1948 and, he freely admits, "struck with an affliction common to my generation: Hemingway Awe," seldom evaluates either the veracity of or the motivations behind the writer's anecdotes. He makes no claim to be objective, which adds to the emotional force of the painful final chapters showing a desolate, depressed Hemingway convinced he could no longer write. By no means the whole truth, Hotchner's loving portrait shows Hemingway to readers as he wanted to be seen and as his most ardent admirers saw him. --Wendy Smith Read More

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  • Product Description

    For the last 14 years of Ernest Hemingway's life, A.E. Hotchner was a close friend. They fished off Cuba, travelled from New York to Paris, Spain, Venice and the Riviera, hunted in Idaho, ran with the bulls in Pamplona, and drank, dined and talked. This is Hotchner's biography of the writer. It explores his last years as he began to write less and drink more, and also includes reminiscences of his childhood, of the Paris literary scene in the 1920s, and of the people and events that shaped his fiction.

  • 0684860546
  • 9780684860541
  • A.E. Hotchner
  • 21 July 1999
  • Scribner
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 323
  • New edition
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