Ernest Hemingway

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ERNEST HEMINGWAY 1899-1961

description

A brief biography of the Nobel Prize winning American novelist

Transcript of Ernest Hemingway

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ERNEST HEMINGWAY 1899-1961

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2nd of 6 children Parents: father – doctor

mother – opera singer

and music teacher Raised in Oak Park, a suburb of

Chicago

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In high school, Hemingway wrote for the school newspaper and edited the school literary journal.

After graduation, he worked for 6 months as a newspaper reporter for the Kansas City Star.

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In June 1918, Hemingway volunteered to be an ambulance driver for the Red Cross and was assigned to Italy, where he was seriously wounded.

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After recovering from his wounds, Hemingway returned home and began to write.

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Everything he wrote was rejected by publishers.

After getting married in 1921, he and his wife sailed to Paris; a friend had given him letters of introduction to:

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Gertrude Stein, author and art collector,

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Sylvia Beach, owner of Shakespeare & Company – the famous Paris bookstore,

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Ezra Pound – poet, literary critic, and editor,

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and they introduced him to:

F. Scott Fitzgerald,

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Sara and Gerald Murphy,

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Pablo Picasso,

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and James Joyce.

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All it then took, was for Gertrude Stein to taunt Hemingway one day, saying, “You are all a Lost Generation.”

The name stuck!

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Hemingway’s first successful novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926), is based on his visits to the Fiesta de San Fermin.

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Hemingway’s experiences being wounded in World War I on the Italian front led to his writing A Farewell to Arms (1929).

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An African safari, with his second wife, Pauline, led to the writing of Green Hills of Africa and “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”

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Hemingway reported on the Spanish Civil War (1936-1938), together with his third wife, Martha Gellhorn.

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Hemingway’s advice to young writers was, “Always write what you know.” In 1939, what many consider his greatest novel was published: For Whom the Bell Tolls, about the Spanish Civil War.

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Hemingway received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954 for Old Man and the Sea.

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Hemingway lived in fascinating places: Cuba

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Key West, Florida

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Sun Valley, Idaho

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Hemingway’s writing has been admired around the world and his works have been translated into many languages.

Two weeks before his 61st birthday, Hemingway committed suicide.

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