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         Hemingway Ernest:     more books (103)
  1. The Short Stories Volume III by Ernest Hemingway, 2003-03-01
  2. A Historical Guide to Ernest Hemingway (Historical Guides to American Authors)
  3. The TORRENTS OF SPRING by Ernest Hemingway, 1998-04-06
  4. Hemingway: A Biography by Jeffrey Meyers, 1999-05-07
  5. Novel Destinations: Literary Landmarks From Jane Austen's Bath to Ernest Hemingway's Key West by Shannon Mckenna Schmidt, Joni Rendon, 2009-06-16
  6. On Paris by Ernest Hemingway, 2010-10-01
  7. The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway, 1952
  8. Nick Adams Stories by Ernest Hemingway, 1981-02-01
  9. Ernest Hemingway's the Old Man and the Sea (Monarch Notes: A Guide to Understanding the World's Great Writing) by Ernest Hemingway, 1997
  10. Hemingway, Eight Decades of Criticism
  11. Ernest Hemingway by Anthony Burgess, 1999-05-01
  12. The Hemingway Patrols: Ernest Hemingway and His Hunt for U-Boats by Terry Mort, 2009-08-18
  13. EL Viejo y el mar (Contemporanea) (Spanish Edition) by Ernest Hemingway, 2005-05-03
  14. Across the River and into the Trees by Ernest Hemingway, 1998-04-15

61. Ernest Hemingway Quotes
A collection of quotes attributed to American novelist and shortstory writer ernest hemingway (1899-1961).
http://www.notable-quotes.com/h/hemingway_ernest.html
Browse quotes by subject Browse quotes by author
ERNEST HEMINGWAY QUOTES The world breaks everyone ... those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, A Farewell to Arms Today is only one day in all the days that will ever be. But what will happen in all the other days that ever come can depend on what you do today. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, For Whom the Bell Tolls All things truly wicked start from an innocence. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, A Moveable Feast Certainly there is no hunting like the hunting of man and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never really care for anything else thereafter. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, "On the Blue Water," Esquire , Apr. 1936 One cat just leads to another. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, as quoted in Louis G. Morton's E-mail Humor For a true writer each book should be a new beginning where he tries again for something that is beyond attainment. He should always try for something that has never been done or that others have tried and failed. Then sometimes, with great luck, he will succeed. ERNEST HEMINGWAY, Nobel Prize acceptance speech, 1954

62. American Authors
But in the 1930s and 1940s ernest hemingway was a literary idoland role model for young writers who imitated his sparse prose and adventurous lifestyle.
http://www.americanlegends.com/authors/index.html
Hemingway: A Look Back His books are seldom read today, and his legend almost a faded memory. But in the 1930s and 1940s Ernest Hemingway was a literary idoland role model for young writers who imitated his sparse prose and adventurous lifestyle. Fame came to Hemingway early; while in his twenties he wrote The Sun Also Rises , a novel about American expatriates in Paris. The people he wrote about had survived the First World War. They were unconcerned with money or materialism and instead were content to while away their days in cafes or running with the bulls at Pamplona. This wasin Gertrude Stein's wordsthe "Lost Generation," and Hemingway became their bard. Only years later would the image of Hemingway in Paris, the struggling young artiste, be exposed as a masterful public relations job. Married to a Southern heiress who supported him in high bohemian style, Hemingway dressed in bulky sweaters to appear muscular and masculine as he paraded around the Latin Quarter. His writing style derived from Gertrude Stein and Sherwood Anderson both of whom he derided in private. It was hinted that the main character in The Sun Also Rises , the irrepressible Lady Brett, was borrowed from another novel. But, by the time these stories were published, years after the fact, the Hemingway myth was solid as Dr. Eiffel's Tower. (Morley Callaghan

63. Ernest Hemingway Quotations
Collection of quotations for the category ernest hemingway Quotations.
http://quotations.about.com/od/stillmorefamouspeople/a/ErnestHemingwa1.htm
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Ernest Hemingway Quotations
From Simran Khurana
Your Guide to Quotations
FREE Newsletter. Sign Up Now! Overcoming Failure: Ernest Hemingway Quotations
But man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated. Courage: Ernest Hemingway Quotations
Courage is grace under pressure. Communication: Ernest Hemingway Quotations
I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen. Health: Ernest Hemingway Quotations
I still need more healthy rest in order to work at my best. My health is the main capital I have and I want to administer it intelligently. Expression: Ernest Hemingway Quotations
My aim is to put down on paper what I see and what I feel in the best and simplest way.

64. CNN In-Depth Specials - A Hemingway Retrospective
The Importance of Being ernest The Key West Home Tour Links The Hollywood Connection Gallery First Edition Covers Poll hemingway s Key West
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/books/1999/hemingway/

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65. Ernest Hemingway Home And Museum, Key West Attractions : Reviews And Location Of
Web Search. Preferences Home Destination Guides Articles Deals Message Boards Guide to Key West Introduction Planning a Trip In Depth
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66. Ernest Hemingway Memorial : Vistidaho.org
Northeast of Sun Valley on Trail Creek Road is the ernest hemingway Memorial. Just south of the bike path is a bust of hemingway and an epitaph he wrote for
http://www.visitidaho.org/thingstodo/arts-culture/ernest-hemingway-memorial.aspx
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Ernest Hemingway Memorial
Mailing Address
Box 2420
Sun Valley, ID 83353
Street Address
251 N. Washington St.
Ketchum, ID 83340
  • Phone: Fax: Toll Free:
Send an Email
www.visitsunvalley.com

Nearest City: Sun Valley Location: Sun Valley Directions: Hwy. 75, E. on Sun Valley Rd. to Trail Creek Rd.
Information
Northeast of Sun Valley on Trail Creek Road is the Ernest Hemingway Memorial. Just south of the bike path is a bust of Hemingway and an epitaph he wrote for a friend who died in a hunting accident during Hemingway's first visit to Idaho. The Hemingway Exhibit in Ketchum features photos and memorabilia of the author's years in Idaho. Contact the Sun Valley/Ketchum Chamber of Commerce for brochures and directions to Hemingway's grave.

67. DJNewspaper Fund - Publications - Jobs, Scholarships, Internships
ernest hemingway Awards. National scholarship competition sponsored by The Kansas City Star, for high school students for their freshman year.
http://djnewspaperfund.dowjones.com/cg_gen_scholarships.asp
The Journalist's Road to Success Table of Contents:
Introduction

Organizations Offering Minority Scholarships

General Internships

Minority Internships
...
Continuing Education

General Journalism Scholarships and Fellowships This page contains a list of financial aid offered by organizations and foundations for the study of journalism/mass communication. For complete details, contact the person listed for each respective program or visit their Web site by clicking on the link provided. Bernard Kilgore Memorial Scholarship . This $5,000 scholarship is awarded annually to a high school senior who attends a high school in New Jersey and will enroll as a freshman journalism major at any U.S. college. The student will be named the New Jersey High School Journalist of the Year and will be nominated for the National High School Journalist of the Year sponsored by the Journalism Education Association. The Kilgore scholarship is awarded by the New Jersey Newspaper Association and the N.J. High School Journalist of the Year is awarded by the Garden State Scholastic Press Association. Apply by February 15. Application form is available online at: www.gsspa.org/scholarships/kilgore.html

68. Hemingway In Cuba - 65.08
Robert Manning visits with ernest hemingway in Cuba. Shortly after ernest hemingway won the Nobel Prize in 1954, Mr. Manning, now executive editor of
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/65aug/6508manning.htm
A U G U S T 1 9 6 5 Shortly after Ernest Hemingway won the Nobel Prize in 1954, Mr. Manning, now executive editor of the ATLANTIC, visited the Hemingways in Cuba to collect first-person material for a magazine profile. From extensive notes taken during that visit and in subsequent talks with Hemingway in Cuba and New York, he has written one man's remembrance of Hemingway in his late years
by Robert Manning

The online version of this article appears in two parts. Click here to go to part two.
O N the shore of Havana's back harbor a stubborn hulk rests in drydock and erodes with time. Its engine and expensive fishing tackle are gone. The fading letters of its name, Pilar, are still visible on the stern. "No one else should sail the Pilar, " says Mary Hemingway. She had hoped to have it towed to sea and sunk off the port of Cojimar, deep into the fishing hole where a strike came at last to the old man "who fished alone in the Gulf Stream and he had gone eighty-four days now without taking a fish." The Cuban government's red tape prevented that, so the Pilar now decays in the Caribbean sun.

69. First World War.com - Prose & Poetry - Ernest Hemingway
First World War.com Prose Poetry - ernest hemingway.
http://www.firstworldwar.com/poetsandprose/hemingway.htm
Updated - Saturday, 11 August, 2001 A Farewell to Arms (1929), Hemingway's great novel set against the background of the war in Italy, eclipses the poetry dealing with his war-time experiences. Before America entered the war Hemingway (1899-1961) volunteered and served in the ambulance corps in France; he was transferred to the Paive region of Italy in July, 1918, and shortly after on July 8 was wounded in a mortar attack. The following poem apparently looks back to that day. Killed Paive - July 8 - 1918
Desire and
All the sweet pulsing aches
And gentle hurtings
That were you,
Are gone into the sullen dark.
Now in the night you come unsmiling
To lie with me
A dull, cold, rigid bayonet
On my hot-swollen, throbbing soul. Exactly who or what was killed on that day is difficult to tell, but the erotic (perhaps even homoerotic) imagery of the "dull, cold, rigid" bayonet and his "hot-swollen, throbbing" soul are intriguing. But aside from these ambiguities, we do know something of the circumstances surrounding his injuries. Hemingway was among the first soldiers to return from the Italian front, and his arrival was reported in the

70. Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum And Educational Center
The hemingwayPfeiffer Museum and Educational Center in Piggott, Arkansas includes a barn-studio associated with ernest hemingway and the family home of his
http://hemingway.astate.edu/
AN ARKANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY HERITAGE SITE The Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center in Piggott, Arkansas includes a barn-studio associated with Ernest Hemingway and the family home of his second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer. Pauline's parents, Paul and Mary Pfeiffer, were prominent citizens of Northeast Arkansas and owned more than 60,000 acres of land. During the 1930s the barn was converted to a studio to give Hemingway privacy for writing while visiting Piggott. Portions of one of his most famous novels, A Farewell to Arms, and several short stories were written in this studio. Both the home and the barn studio were named to the National Historic Register in 1982. The properties have been renovated, focusing on the 1930s era. Areas of emphasis for the museum and educational center include literature of the period, 1930s world events, agriculture and family lifestyles, family relationships and development of Northeast Arkansas during the Depression and New Deal eras. Arkansas State University's Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center, located approximately 60 miles north of ASU's main campus in Jonesboro, also serves as the Visitors' Center for the northern terminus of

71. The Big Read
ernest hemingway may have been the most famous novelist in the English ernest hemingway eventually committed suicide in 1961, following the path of his
http://www.neabigread.org/books/farewelltoarms/hemingway04_about.php
A Farewell to Arms
About the Author
Preface Introduction Historical Context About the Author ... Teacher's Guide Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) Ernest Hemingway may have been the most famous novelist in the English language during his lifetime. Idolized by readers, envied by fellow writers, and adored by many for the romantic lifestyle that he created for himself, Hemingway the writer must always be distinguished from Hemingway the public figure. The first was a sensitive and exacting artist; the second was a larger-than-life image maintained for tabloid consumption. As early as 1929, Dorothy Parker was moved to remark: "Probably of no other living man has so much tripe been penned or spoken." Such success did not, however, alleviate his personal struggles. For a man so publicly celebrated and revered, he could be curiously reticent-he wanted no biography written about his life, and he left a will that blocked any publication of his letters. His later years were marked by severe depression, for which he underwent electro-convulsive therapy. Suffering from acute paranoia, he believed for a time that federal agents were after him. Years of alcoholism and organ damage wreaked havoc on his body; digestive complications, high blood pressure, and failing eyesight troubled him constantly. Ernest Hemingway eventually committed suicide in 1961, following the path of his father and two siblings. Hemingway and the Lost Generation Though he had served as an ambulance driver during the First World War, Ernest Hemingway's decisive years in Europe started in 1921, when he arrived in France with a letter of introduction from the writer Sherwood Anderson. In those postwar years, Paris had become the home of many expatriate writers, including Ezra Pound, James Joyce, E.E. Cummings, Ford Madox Ford, and Gertrude Stein. Hart Crane and F. Scott Fitzgerald were frequent visitors. It was this circle of mostly American writers that Hemingway joined when he arrived; and while "the Lost Generation" was Gertrude Stein's phrase, it was Hemingway who immortalized it as the epigraph for his 1926 novel

72. American Rhetoric: Ernest Hemingway - Nobel Prize For Literature Acceptance Addr
Full text and audio mp3 of ernest hemingway Nobel Prize Acceptance Address.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/ernesthemingwayreadingofnobelprizespeec
Ernest Hemingway 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature Acceptance Speech Audio mp3 of Address Plug-in required for flash audio var so = new SWFObject("playerSingle.swf", "mymovie", "192", "67", "7", "#FFFFFF"); so.addVariable("autoPlay", "no"); so.addVariable("soundPath", "http://74.53.81.178/~eiden/mp3clips/speeches/ernesthemingwaynobelprize45444444444444444444445555555555555555555.mp3"); so.write("flashPlayer"); [AUTHENTICITY CERTIFIED: Text version below transcribed directly from audio] Having no facility for speech-making and no command of oratory nor any domination of rhetoric, I wish to thank the administrators of the generosity of Alfred Nobel for this Prize.
No writer who knows the great writers who did not receive the Prize can accept it other than with humility. There is no need to list these writers. Everyone here may make his own list according to his knowledge and his conscience.
It would be impossible for me to ask the Ambassador of my country to read a speech in which a writer said all of the things which are in his heart. Things may not be immediately discernible in what a man writes, and in this sometimes he is fortunate; but eventually they are quite clear and by these and the degree of alchemy that he possesses he will endure or be forgotten.
Writing, at its best, is a lonely life. Organizations for writers palliate the writer's loneliness but I doubt if they improve his writing. He grows in public stature as he sheds his loneliness and often his work deteriorates. For he does his work alone and if he is a good enough writer he must face eternity, or the lack of it, each day.

73. Ernest Hemingway Festival
ernest hemingway Festival™. The ernest hemingway Festival September 18thSeptember 21st, 2008. 2008 Theme hemingway In Cuba
http://www.ernesthemingwayfestival.org/
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The Ernest Hemingway Festival September 18th-September 21st, 2008 2008 Theme: Hemingway In Cuba 1-866-549-5783 or info@visitsunvalley.com Further details for the 2008 event will be posted soon.! Hemingway’s strong bond to the Wood River Valley and Idaho.   We look forward to seeing you at the festival!

74. Ernest Hemingway
A bibliography of ernest hemingway s books, with the latest releases, covers, descriptions and availability.
http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/h/ernest-hemingway/
Fantastic Fiction Authors H Ernest Hemingway Preferences google_ad_client = "pub-4149752303753296";google_alternate_ad_url = "http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/frames/banner.htm";google_ad_width = 468;google_ad_height = 60;google_ad_format = "468x60_as";google_ad_type = "text_image";google_ad_channel ="5061332721";google_color_border = "6699CC";google_color_bg = "003366";google_color_link = "FFFFFF";google_color_url = "AECCEB";google_color_text = "AECCEB"; Home Awards New Books Coming Soon ... Years Browse Authors A H O V ... U
Ernest Hemingway
Search Authors Search Books About Ernest Hemingway One of the towering authors of the twentieth century, Ernest Hemingway won the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature. Novels The Sun Also Rises The Torrents of Spring A Farewell to Arms To Have and Have Not ... The Garden of Eden Collections Three Stories and Ten Poems In Our Time Men Without Women Winner Take Nothing ... The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway Plays Adventures of a Young Man Anthologies edited Men at War: The Best War Stories of All Time Non fiction Death in the Afternoon Green Hills of Africa A Moveable Feast By-Line: Selected Articles and Dispatches ... Under Kilimanjaro Anthologies containing stories by Ernest Hemingway Reading I've Liked Short stories The Snows of Kilimanjaro Awards Nobel Prize in Literature Lifetime Achievement winner Books about Ernest Hemingway Novelist-Philosopher-x: Hemingway by Robert Penn Warren Ernest Hemingway and his World by Anthony Burgess Jack London, Hemingway, and the Constitution: Selected Essays, 1977-1992

75. Hemingway In Sun Valley
Author ernest hemingway embraced local nature and nightspots with a vigor matched only by his fictional and largely autobiographical character Nick Adams.
http://www.svguide.com/hemhaunts.htm
Home Photos Haunts Quotes
Hemingway Haunts Author Ernest Hemingway embraced local nature and nightspots with a vigor matched only by his fictional and largely autobiographical character Nick Adams. As Adams lived in Michigan's wilderness, Hemingway meandered the meadows of Sun Valley and the Big Wood River. Hemingway's time in Sun Valley began in 1939 when he came to the area after Union Pacific Railroad chairman Averell Harriman invited Hemingway and other celebrities to Sun Valley. In the fall of 1939, he finished his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls . He worked on it while staying in suite 206 at the Sun Valley Lodge. The author made his hunting haunt the Silver Creek area near Picabo, shooting feathered prey and big game. They were going after partridges so he pulled out the tube of the magazine and poured the long-rifle cartridges into his hand and then put them into a chamois pouch and filled the magazine with .22 shorts. They made less noise and would not tear the meat up if he could get head shots.

76. Ernest Hemingway Home And Museum, Trusted Tours And Attractions
ernest hemingway lived and wrote in Key West for more than ten years. Step back in time and visit the home and gardens that witnessed the most prolific
http://www.trustedtours.com/store/Ernest-Hemingway-Home-and-Museum-C117.aspx

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Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum
Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum (ADULT) Retail Price:
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Ernest Hemingway lived and wrote here for more than ten years. Calling Key West home, Ernest Hemingway found solace and great physical challenge in the turquoise waters that surround this tiny island.
Overview: Step back i n time and visit the rooms and gardens that witnessed the most prolific period of this Nobel Prize winner's writing career. Educated tour guides give insightful narratives and are eager to answer questions.
Wander through the lush grounds and enjoy the whimsy of the more than sixty cats that live here.
The Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum is a significant address on any Key West itinerary. The museum welcomes thousands of visitors from around the world each year and looks forward to welcoming you!

77. IMS: Ernest Hemingway, HarperAudio
On this segment of HarperAudio!, we hear ernest hemingway (18991961) giving his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize for Literature, recorded by a Havana,
http://town.hall.org/radio/HarperAudio/012494_harp_ITH.html
Ernest Hemingway
Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
On this segment of HarperAudio!, we hear Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) giving his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize for Literature, recorded by a Havana, Cuba radio station in 1954. It is followed by a speech Hemingway gave to introduce a production of his play "The Fifth Column." The play is set in Madrid during the Spanish Civil War, where Hemingway served as a war correspondent. In both these excerpts, Hemingway displays in speech the economy of style and almost staccato structure that made him one of the most influential writers of the 20th Century.
"In Harry's Bar in Venice"
Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway describes the plot of a novel set "In Harry's Bar in Venice." Taped with a transistorized pocket recorder sometime in the late 1950s, this speech displays Hemingway's aggressive, and in this recording somewhat inebriated, personality and style. His terse sentences and economy of description have made him one of the most important and most widely imitated American writers of the 20th Century.

78. Ernest Hemingway: Travel Adventure In Ketchum, Idaho
There s a Picasso in there somewhere said Angela hemingway, wife of Jack eldest son of author ernest hemingway. I have to run some errands and will be
http://www.usplanb.com/hemingway.cfm
"A Moveable Feast"
Travel Adventure in Ketchum, Idaho
Two days in Ketchum, Idaho with Jack and Angela Hemingway was one of those "pinch me, I must be dreaming" adventures. We were there to interview Jack for the upcoming release of the Hemingway line of furniture being introduced by Thomasville . What we found was one of the most unique travel experiences of a lifetime. Click each picture for a larger version "There's a Picasso in there somewhere" said Angela Hemingway, wife of Jack ...eldest son of author Ernest Hemingway. "I have to run some errands and will be back in about an hour...just make yourself at home." We went inside the solid concrete structure. The furnishings were the latest of the 50's and early 60's. The overall decor of the home where Ernest Hemingway lived his final two years seemed to suspend time. "This house will survive a nuclear attack" remarked Jack. "It was built to last..as will the writings of my father." We wandered through the house, stopping frequently to admire various items of memorabilia placed throughout the living room. There was a bronze bust on a shelf which was surrounded by other items. Hemingway had a way of expressing our deepest desires to know the world in which we live.

79. The Paris Review - The Art Of Fiction No. 21
Return to Interview Archive Index. ernest hemingway, ernest hemingway Find the complete ernest hemingway interview in The Paris Review Interviews,
http://www.theparisreview.com/viewinterview.php/prmMID/4825

Return to Interview Archive Index

ERNEST HEMINGWAY
The Art of Fiction No. 21 Interviewed by George Plimpton Issue 18, Spring 1958 Purchase this issue View a manuscript page
INTERVIEWER
Is emotional stability necessary to write well? You told me once that you could only write well when you were in love. Could you expound on that a bit more?
HEMINGWAY
What a question. But full marks for trying. You can write any time people will leave you alone and not interrupt you. Or rather you can if you will be ruthless enough about it. But the best writing is certainly when you are in love. If it is all the same to you I would rather not expound on that.
Find the complete Ernest Hemingway interview in The Paris Review Interviews, I available now from Picador.
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80. The Speiser And Easterling-Hallman Foundation Collection
ernest hemingway did not have a literary agent, and Maurice Speiser performed ernest hemingway s marked typescripts and proofs have particular value for
http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/amlit/hemingway/hemingway.html
The University of South Carolina has received, through the generosity of donors, a major modern American literature collection. The Speiser and Easterling-Hallman Foundation Collection is centered on a superb collection of the books of Ernest Hemingway, with correspondence, transcripts, and proofs. There is additional strength in Maurice J. Speiser's correspondence with other friends and clients in literature, music, and the arts. While the books are in museum condition, the collection is not just for display: it is a working collection, providing material for teaching and scholarship.
Maurice J. Speiser
Maurice J. Speiser (1880-1948) first encountered the stirrings of modernism as a young attorney in Philadelphia. During regular trips to Europe in the 1920's, Speiser met Ezra Pound, Hemingway, and others. With his wife Martha Glazer Speiser, he was a patron of music and the theatre, a discerning collector of art, and a friend to many significant writers. During the 1930's, in addition to general legal practice, Speiser developed a special interest in the legal requirements of artists and writers. The Hemingway Books
Starting with Hemingway's first small-press books, published in Paris in the 1920's, Maurice Speiser assembled a comprehensive collection of Hemingway's works, many with personal inscriptions. He actively sought out, not only the first printings, but advance copies, salesmen's dummies, British editions, translations and periodical appearances, and the collection was continued and enhanced after his death by his son Raymond A. Speiser. This collection, which has all the Hemingway rarities, could never be duplicated now.

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