Virtual Hemingway

by Lisa Tyler
More than 375 Hemingway-related links organized into 23 categories

Virtual Hemingway is intended to provide persons interested in the author with links to scholarship and other information about Hemingway on-line as well as to selected manifestations of Hemingway’s appearances in popular culture. The Hemingway Society cannot be responsible for the content or function of external web sites, nor should the links be considered an endorsement of any product, service, or organization.

 

Articles by Ernest Hemingway

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Ernest Hemingway’s Kansas City Star Stories (includes links to 12 articles)

“The Hemingway Papers,” including 19 articles Hemingway wrote for the Toronto Starbetween 1920 and 1924

“Hemingway’s Dispatches From Spain from the Archives of The New York Times“ (includes links to nine articles) (requires free registration)

Biographical Information

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“The Lessons of Youth:  Ernest Hemingway as a Young Man” by Francis McGovern for the Literary Traveler

Literary Ambulance Drivers by Steve Ruediger

” ‘Papa’ Hemingway as Seen by a Son,” written by Patrick Hemingway for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“Ringing the Changes,” Chapter One of Hemingway:  The Final Years, by Michael Reynolds (requires free registration)

“A Search for the Man as He Really Was” by Carlos Baker in the 26 July 1964 New York Times (requires free registration)

“The Sun Also Sets:  A Visit to Hemingway’s Grave and Memorial,” by Frank Bures for the Literary Traveler

“Valerie Hemingway:  Inside the Cuadrilla” by James Plath from his 1999 book Remembering Hemingway

Books about Hemingway

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Asante Papa!, a site about a book by Paul D. Hammerstein, written as a tribute to Ernest Hemingway

“The Best He Could Do,” a review of books about Hemingway by Michael Reynolds, Leonard J. Leff, and Rose Marie Burwell, by Thomas Flanagan for the 21 October 1999 New York Review of Books

“Coming of Age, Going to Pieces,” by Raymond Carver, a review of Peter Griffin’s Along with Youth and Jeffrey Meyers’s Hemingway for the 17 Nov. 1985 New York Times

Everybody Was So Young, an interview with Amanda Vaill, author of a biography of Gerald and Sara Murphy, for NPR’s All Things Considered 20 June 1998

“Feasts Fit for a Writer,” a discussion of The Hemingway Cookbook by Craig Boreth (including a link to a recipe for Lime Ice), published in the University of Pennsylvania’s Gazette, an alumni publication

Hemingway Cookbook, an interview with author Craig Boreth for NPR’s All Things Considered

“An Interview with Paula McLain, Author of The Paris Wife,“ by Allie Baker for the Hemingway Project

Noel Riley Fitch, author of Hemingway’s Paris:  Parisian Walks for the Literary Traveler, Literary Cafes of Paris, and Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation:  A History of Literary Paris in the Twenties and Thirties

“Papa Was a Rolling Stone” by Kim Spilker for BookPage (a July 1999 review of Hemingway:  The Final Years by Michael Reynolds and A Hemingway Odyssey:  Special Places in His Life by H. Lea Lawrence)

“Poor Papa,” a response by John Leonard to “The Best He Could Do” in the New York Review of Books (see above)

“Pretty to Think So,” a response by Barbara Probst Solomon to “The Best He Could Do” in the New York Review of Books (see above)

“Ringing the Changes,” Chapter One of Hemingway:  The Final Years, by Michael Reynolds (requires free registration)

Books by Hemingway (listed chronologically by title)

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In Our Time

An Annotation of Indian Camp by Janice L. Willms for the Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database hosted by New York University

“Hemingway’s Out of Season:  The Importance of Close Reading” by Charles J. Nolan, Jr., published by the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association in its Rocky Mountain E-Review of Language and Literature

“La Tauromaquia:  The Art of Bullfighting”

Novel Analysis of “Big Two-Hearted River” by Novelguide.com

“Preludes to a Mood” in the 18 Oct. 1925 New York Times (requires free registration)

“A River Runs Through It: Recollection, Return, and Renovation in Hemingway’s In Our Time and Wordsworth’s Prelude“ ( a paper presented at the International Hemingway Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, in 1996) by Steven M. Lane of the Department of English of Malaspina University-College

” ‘Scared sick looking at it’:  A Reading of Nick Adams in the Published Stories” by Howard L. Hannum in the Spring 2001 issue of Twentieth Century Literature

Spark Notes Online Study Guide to In Our Time by Emily von Kohorn

“World War I:  Trenches on the Web, An Internet History of the Great War”

Torrents of Spring

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“Mr. Hemingway Writes Some High-Spirited Nonsense” in the 13 June 1926 New York Times (requires free registration)

The Sun Also Rises

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“25 Years of a Hemingway Classic” by Carlos Baker for the 29 April 1951 New York Times (requires free registration)

BookRags Book Notes to The Sun Also Rises, by Melissa Carlson

“Hemingway in Pamplona” by John Affleck for the Literary Traveler

“Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and The Sun Also Rises” written by Paige Grande for Literary Traveler

“Marital Tragedy” in the 31 Oct. 1926 New York Times (requires free registration)

“La Tauromaquia:  The Art of Bullfighting”

SparkNotes Online Study Guide to The Sun Also Rises by Selena Ward

“The Sun Also Rises:  A Memory of War” by William Adair in the Spring 2001 issue of Twentieth Century Literature

A Farewell to Arms

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An Annotation of A Farewell to Arms by Janice L. Willms for the Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database hosted by New York University

BookRags Book Notes to A Farewell to Arms, by Joel Christensen

“Boston Police Bar Scribner’s Magazine” in the 21 June 1929 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)” from the Heath Online Instructors Guide, Margaret Anne O’Connor and John Alberti, contributing editors (emphasizes “Hills Like White Elephants” and A Farewell to Arms)

“A Farewell to Arms (To Queen Elizabeth),” the poem by George Peele from which Hemingway took the title for his novel

“Finding Patterns in Hemingway and Camus:  Construction of Meaning and Truth” by Robert D. Lane and Steven M. Lane of Malaspina University-College and published online in The Existence of Albert Camus

“In 1928 in Kansas City, Hemingway Gained a Son and a Novel Insight,” by Brian Burnes for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“Love and War in the Pages of Mr. Hemingway,” by Perry Hutchison, in the 29 Sept. 1929 New York Times(requires free registration)

SparkNotes Online Study Guide to A Farewell to Arms by Brian Phillips

“To Use and Use Not” by Julie Bosman in the 4 July 2012 New York Times

“World War I:  Trenches on the Web, An Internet History of the Great War”

Death in the Afternoon

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“Hemingway Now Writes of Bull-Fighting as an Art” by R.L. Duffus in the 25 Sept. 1932 New York Times(requires free registration)

“Inside the Whale Inside: A Hypertextual Journey into the Belly of Modernism” by Robert Scholes of Brown University

“La Tauromaquia:  The Art of Bullfighting”

Men without Women

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An Annotation of “Hills like White Elephants” by Martha Stoddard Holmes for the Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database hosted by New York University

“Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)” from the Heath Online Instructors Guide, Margaret Anne O’Connor and John Alberti, contributing editors (emphasizes “Hills Like White Elephants” and A Farewell to Arms)

” ‘He was pretty good in there today’:  Reviving the Macho Christ in Ernest Hemingway’s ‘Today is Friday’ and Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ,” by Lisa Tyler, in the June 2007 Journal of Men, Masculinities, and Spirituality

“Vaudeville Philosophers:  The Killers” by Ron Berman in the Spring 1999 issue of Twentieth-Century Literature

“Teaching Hemingway’s ‘Hills’ “ by Steven M. Lane of Malaspina University-College

Winner Take Nothing

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An Annotation of “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” by Janice L. Willms for the Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database hosted by New York University

An Annotation of “God Rest You Merry Gentlemen” by Janice L. Willms for the Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database hosted by New York University

“Books of the Times” by John Chamberlain in the 27 Oct. 1933 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Hemingway’s New Stories and Other Recent Works of Fiction” by Louis Kronenberger in the 5 Nov. 1933New York Times (requires free registration)

Novel Analysis of “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place” from Novelguide.com

Green Hills of Africa

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“Books of the Times” by John Chamberlain in the 25 Oct. 1935 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Ernest Hemingway’s Story of His African Safari” by C.G. Poore in the 27 Oct. 1935 New York Times(requires free registration)

To Have and Have Not

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“Books of the Times” by Charles Poore in the 15 Oct. 1937 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Ernest Hemingway’s First Novel in Eight Years” by J. Donald Adams in the 17 Oct. 1937 New York Times(requires free registration)

“There’s Something about Harry:  To Have and Have Not as Novel and Film” by Ed Krzemienski for Bright Lights Film Journal

The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories

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“Books of the Times” by Charles Poore in the 14 Oct. 1938 New York Times (requires free registration)

“The Fifth Column,” a review by Philip Young for the 21 Sept. 1969 New York Times (free registration required)

“Hemingway’s Play and Stories” by Peter Monro Jack in the 23 Oct. 1938 New York Times (requires free registration)

Hemingway reads an excerpt from The Fifth Column, posted by salon.com in cooperation with HarperAudio (in MP3 and Real Media streaming formats)

For Whom the Bell Tolls

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“Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives” (about foreign volunteers in the Spanish Civil War)

“The Abraham Lincoln Brigade of the Spanish Civil War”

BookRags Book Notes for For Whom the Bell Tolls, by Erica Freund

“Books of the Times” by Ralph Thompson in the 21 Oct. 1940 New York Times (requires free registration)

ClassicNote on For Whom the Bell Tolls (includes a summary and analysis of each chapter)

“Rabbit Stew and Blowing Dorothy’s Bridges:  Love, Aggression, and Fetishism in For Whom the Bell Tolls“by Carl Eby, published in the Summer 1998 issue of Twentieth-Century Literature

“Robert Jordan, Hemingway’s Bipartisan Hero” on NPR

“Rose Macaulay’s And No Man’s Wit and Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls:  Two Spanish Civil War Novels and Questions of Canonicity,” by D.A. Boxwell, in the Fall 1992 issue of WILLA, journal of the Women in Literacy and Life Assembly of the National Council of Teachers of English

“The Spanish Civil War”

“The Spanish Revolution and Civil War 1936-1939″ created by Eugene W. Plawiuk

SparkNotes Online Study Guide to For Whom the Bell Tolls by Brian Phillips

Across the River and Into the Trees

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“The Author’s Name is Hemingway” by John O’Hara in the 10 Sept. 1950 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Speaking of Books” by J. Donald Adams in the 24 Sept. 1950 New York Times (requires free registration)

The Old Man and the Sea

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BookRags Book Notes to The Old Man and the Sea, by Valerie Volcovici

“Books of the Times” by Orville Prescott in the 28 Aug. 1952 New York Times (requires free registration)

ClassicNote on The Old Man and the Sea (includes a summary and analysis)

“The Enduring Depths of Old Man and the Sea” on NPR

Ernest Hemingway:  Wrestling with Life, Part I, the first half of the 100-minute video from the Biography Channel

“Hemingway’s Boat Captain Still the Old Man, as Anyone (Willing to Pay) Can See” by Mireya Navarro for the New York Times News Service 27 June 1999

“Hemingway’s Tragic Fisherman” by Robert Gorham Davis in the 7 Sept. 1952 New York Times (requires free registration)

An interview with the producer of the IMAX film of The Old Man and the Sea for NPR’s 3 Sept. 1999 All Things Considered

The Old Man and the Sea, a four-minute stop-action video created by German artist Marcel Schindler

The Old Man and the Sea, an NPR interview with Hemingway biographer Jeffrey Meyers after the death of Gregorio Fuentes in 2002

Spark Notes Online Study Guide to The Old Man and the Sea by Jesse Lichtenstein

A Moveable Feast

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“Ernest Hemingway’s Memoir of Paris in the Twenties” by Charles Poore in the 5 May 1964 New York Times (requires free registration)

Ernest Hemingway’s Son and Grandson Discuss the Restored Edition of A Moveable Feast, in this three-minute video from Simon & Schuster

“Hemingway as His Own Fable” by Alfred Kazin for the June 1964 Atlantic

“Hemingway’s Libidinous Feast” by Christopher Hitchens for June 2009 Atlantic

“The Making of the Book:  A Chronicle and a Memoir” by Mary Hemingway in the 10 May 1964 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Paris on My Mind:  Why Ernest Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast Is Great Literary Comfort Food” by Don George for the 2 June 1999 salon.com

“There is Never Any End to Paris” by Lewis Galantiere for the 10 May 1964 New York Times (requires free registration)

By-Line:  Ernest Hemingway, Selected Articles and Dispatches of Four Decades

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“His Beat Was the World,” a review of By-Line:  Ernest Hemingway, Selected Articles and Dispatches of Four Decades by Carlos Baker for the 28 May 1967 New York Times (requires free registration)

Islands in the Stream

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“100-Proof Old Ernest, Most of it Anyway,” a review of Islands in the Stream by Robie Macauley for the 4 Oct. 1970 New York Times (requires free registration)

“A Double Life, Half-Told,” by Malcolm Cowley for the December 1970 Atlantic

The Nick Adams Stories

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“More Posthumous Hemingway,” a review of The Nick Adams Stories by Richard R. Lingeman for the 25 April 1972 New York Times (free registration required)

Ernest Hemingway:  Selected Letters, 1917-1961

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“Messages from a Divided Man,” a review of Ernest Hemingway:  Selected Letters, 1917-1961, edited by Carlos Baker, by Irving Howe for the 29 March 1981 New York Times (free registration required)

“The Private Hemingway,” excerpts from Ernest Hemingway:  Selected Letters, 1917-1961, edited by Carlos Baker, from the 15 Feb. 1981 New York Times (free registration required)

Dangerous Summer

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“The Last Ole’,” a review of Dangerous Summer by William Kennedy for the 9 June 1985 New York Times (free registration required)

“New Hemingway Book on Matadors” by Edwin McDowell in the 2 Jan. 1985 New York Times (requires free registration)

The Garden of Eden

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“Braver Than We Thought” by E.L. Doctorow for the 18 May 1986 New York Times (requires free registration)

The trailer for the 2008 film The Garden of Eden, from Youtube

The Only Thing that Counts:  The Ernest Hemingway-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence

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“Tone it Down, He Urged Hemingway,” a review of The Only Thing that Counts:  The Ernest Hemingway-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli, by Michiko Kakutani for the 9 Nov. 1996 New York Times (free registration required)

True at First Light

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Chapter One of True at First Light

“Hemingway Is Still True at First Light,” a review by Bob Shacochis for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“Hemingway’s Latest Not True to Form” by Adam Fein for the 29 October 1999 Yale Herald

“The Last Safari” with text and photographs by Earl Theisen (originally for Look magazine) reprinted in September 1999 Audobon

“The Lion King,” a review of True at First Light by James Wood for the 11 July 1999 New York Times (free registration required)

Review of True at First Light by Alan Cheuse for NPR’s All Things Considered 19 July 1999

“The Son Also Profits” by Frederick Zackel of Bowling Green State University in Ohio for July 1999 January magazine

The Letters of Ernest Hemingway

“Ernest Hemingway’s Life in Letters” from Vanity Fair magazine

“An Interview with the General Editor of the Letters of Ernest Hemingway” (Sandra Spanier) by Melissanne Scheld on the blog of Cambridge University Press, North America, the publisher of the letters

“The Hunt for Hemingway” by A. Scott Berg for the September 2011 Vanity Fair

“The Letters of Ernest Hemingway:  Behind the Scenes,” a four-minute video featuring Sandra Spanier, general editor of the Hemingway Letters Project, and Patrick Hemingway

“The Making of the Letters of Ernest Hemingway:  A Visit to Cuba,” a two-minute video posted by Cambridge University Press, North America

Comparative Studies

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“Child Hemingway’s Pilgrimage: Byron, Hemingway, and Authority,” a paper presented by Steven M. Lane at the International Hemingway Conference, January 3-9, Bimini, Bahamas

“Finding Patterns in Hemingway and Camus:  Construction of Meaning and Truth” by Robert D. Lane and Steven M. Lane of Malaspina University-College in Canada

Critical Reputation

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“Authors and Critics Appraise Works” (a collection of tributes to Hemingway by Lionel Trilling, Alfred Kazin, John Dos Passos, Lillian Hellman, Tennessee Williams, Carl Sandburg, William Faulkner and Robert Frost) for the 3 July 1962 New York Times  (requires free registration)

“A Case of Identity: Ernest Hemingway,” by Anders Hallengren, first published August 28, 2001 and now appearing on the official website of the Nobel Foundation

“Contemporary Writers on Hemingway,” quotes from six distinguished authors, compiled by Steve Paul for a centennial issue of The Hemingway Review and posted by the Kansas City Star

Ernest Hemingway page at the Nobel E-Museum

Ernest Hemingway television programming on C-Span American Writers II, the Twentieth Century, includes, via streaming video, a 37-minute tour of the National Portrait Gallery exhibit on Hemingway, a forty-minute interview with the late Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, and a two-hour television program featuring Susan Beegel, editor of the Hemingway Review, and Linda Patterson Miller, author of Letters from the Lost Generation

“Hemingway and the True Poetry of War,” a keynote address given by Robert Morgan at the U.S. Air Force Academy 9 October 1999 for the Hemingway and War Conference and published in the Spring/Summer 2000 issue of War, Literature, and the Arts

Hemingway Centenary, featuring Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, Lillian Ross (who interviewed Hemingway for the New Yorker), and Patrick Hemingway, for NPR’s 21 July 1999 Talk of the Nation

“Hemingway in Our Times,” a web-only essay on Hemingway’s centenary by biographer Michael Reynolds for the New York Times (requires free registration)

“Hemingway on War and its Aftermath,” an article written by Thomas Putnam for the spring 2006 issue ofPrologue, published by the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration

“Hemingway Unbound” by James W. Tuttleton for the December 1992 New Criterion Online

“Hemingway’s Fiction Contains Great Truths about the Places he Visited” by Richard P. McDonough for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“My Problem with Hemingway,” by Susan Whitmore, instructor of English at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, for the Kansas City Star

“Narrative Strategies and Effects in Hemingway,” transcript of an interview of  James Phelan by Phillip Sipora 29 Nov. 1995

“Reading Hemingway without Guilt” by Frederick Busch in 12 January 1992 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Remembering Papa” by Neil A. Graves for the July/Aug. 1999 issue of Cigar Aficionado

“Speaking of Books” by J. Donald Adams in 16 July 1961 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Tracking Hemingway” in 21 July 1999 Atlantic

“Was ‘Papa’ a Truly Great Writer?” by Maxwell Geismar in the 1 July 1962 New York Times (requires free registration)

“What I Like About Hemingway”, by Susan Beegel, editor of The Hemingway Review, for the Kansas CityStar

“Why We Celebrate Hemingway,” a keynote address given by Joseph Waldmeir at the Hemingway Birth Centennial, Petoskey, Michigan, 25 July 1999

Events

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Michigan Hemingway Society, which hosts a conference in Petoskey in October

A Moveable Feast . . . The Hemingway Days Festival

Film and Television

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Ernest Hemingway as a World War II Spy, an approximately 90-minute video from C-Span, featuring Nicholas Reynolds at the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C.

Ernest Hemingway filmography from the Internet Movie Database

Ernest Hemingway television programming on C-Span American Writers II, the Twentieth Century, includes, via streaming video, a 37-minute tour of the National Portrait Gallery exhibit on Hemingway, a forty-minute interview with the late Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, and a two-hour television program featuring Susan Beegel, editor of the Hemingway Review, and Linda Patterson Miller, author of Letters from the Lost Generation

Ernest Hemingway:  Wrestling with Life, Part I, the first half of the 100-minute video from the Biography Channel

Five articles by Martha Gellhorn in Granta

“Get Away Like Gellhorn” by Amy Shearn for oprah.com on 30 May 2012

Hemingway and Gellhorn, the 2012 HBO movie’s official website

“Hemingway Said What?:  A Cultural Cheat Sheet for Midnight in Paris“ by Reeves Wiedeman and Eric Nusbaum in the 10 June 2011 Atlantic

“A Hemingway Story, and Just as Fictional,” a review of In Love and War by Gioia Diliberto for the 26 Jan. 1997 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Imagining Hemingway’s Marriage” about Hemingway and Gellhorn by Margaret Barra for29 May 2012 Atlantic

Midnight in Paris, official site of the 2011 Woody Allen film

“Television; Reading Hemingway with One Eye Closed” by James R. Mellow in the 24 April  1988 New York Times (requires free registration)

The trailer for the 2008 film The Garden of Eden, from Youtube

The trailer for Hemingway and Gellhorn, published on Youtube by HBO

Just for Fun

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“The Expatriates:  A Play in Two Acts” by Charles L. Cron

Hemingway Look-Alike Society on NPR’s 24 July 1999 Weekend Edition

Hemingway’s answer to “Why did the chicken cross the road?”

“A Moveable Interview” by Cleveland Amory for the 6 Dec. 1964 New York Times (a posthumous interview) (requires free registration)

“Sharks in Literature Page”

Libraries with Hemingway Collections

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The Clifton Waller Barrett Library of American Literature, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library

The Ernest Hemingway Collection at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library in Boston, Massachusetts (including a catalog of the collection, an update to the catalog, and downloadable copies of Hemingway’s Reading:  An Inventory by Michael Reynolds and Hemingway’s Library:  A Composite Record by James D. Brasch and Joseph Sigman)

The Ernest Hemingway Collection at the Library of Congress, donated by John Hemingway and A. E. Hotchner

Master List of Finding Aids in Manuscript and like Collections in the Princeton University Library (includes information on the Ernest Hemingway Collection)

The Speiser and Easterling-Hallman Foundation Collection at Thomas Cooper Library at the University of South Carolina

Major Sites

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The Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park

“Featured Author:  Ernest Hemingway” for the New York Times (requires free registration)

The Hemingway Blog;  Essays, Articles, and Links concerning the Author, compiled by David Gagne

The Hemingway Project:  Collecting Stories about the Enduring Influence of Ernest Hemingway

“The Hemingway Resource Center” from the Lost Generation Bookstore

“PAL: Perspectives in American Literature:  A Research and Reference Guide” compiled by Paul P. Reuben

“Sun Rises on Hemingway Centennial” for CNN

“Timeless Hemingway”

“Hemingway’s Cuba” compiled by Hilary K. Justice

Martha Gellhorn

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“The Arabs of Palestine” by Martha Gellhorn for the October 1961 Atlantic

Hemingway and Gellhorn, the 2012 HBO movie’s official website

“High Explosive for Everyone” by Martha Gellhorn in Madrid in July 1937, reprinted by PBS for its Reporting America at War series

“Martha Gellhorn, 1909-1998″

“Martha Gellhorn, A Life of Wit and Rage:  An Appreciation–She Covered 7 Wars but Preferred Writing Fiction,” written by Mary Blume for the International Herald Tribune

“Martha Gellhorn, Hemingway’s Fiery Rival” by Alexandra Fuller for 14 May 2012Newsweek

“Report, Camden, New Jersey, April 25, 1935,” a letter to the Federal Emergency Relief Administration from  Martha Gellhorn now in the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library and made available online by the New Deal Network

Review of Martha Gellhorn:  A Twentieth-Century American Life by Caroline Moorehead, by Maureen Corrigan for NPR’s 20 Oct. 2003 Fresh Air

The trailer for Hemingway and Gellhorn, published on Youtube by HBO

The Women Who Wrote the War, an 11 October 1999 interview of Nancy Caldwell Sorel, author of a book about women war correspondents in World War II, including Martha Gellhorn, by David Gergen for the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer

Modernism

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American Cultural History, 1920-1929, from Kingwood Library at Lone Star College

“American Modernism” from the Voice of the Shuttle

“Inside the Whale Inside: A Hypertextual Journey into the Belly of Modernism” by Robert Scholes of Brown University

“The Lost Generation”

Modblog, Encyclopedia of Literary Modernism

The Modernism Lab at Yale University

“Picturing Literary Modernism” from the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Organizations

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The Hemingway Society of Japan Online (much of the site is in Japanese and may require non-Japanese readers to download software for displaying Japanese characters properly)

The International Hemingway Society

The Michigan Hemingway Society

Pauline Pfeiffer

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“Pauline Pfeiffer Hemingway” from the Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center

Photos, Videos, and Other Images

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Ernest Hemingway on the cover of 1 September 1952 Life

Ernest Hemingway slide show from the New York Times (requires free registration)

Ernest Hemingway television programming on C-Span American Writers II, the Twentieth Century, includes, via streaming video, a 37-minute tour of the National Portrait Gallery exhibit on Hemingway, a 40-minute interview with the late Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, and a two-hour television program featuring Susan Beegel, editor of the Hemingway Review, and Linda Patterson Miller, author of Letters from the Lost Generation

“Ernest Hemingway’s Life in Letters” from Vanity Fair magazine

“Picturing Hemingway:  A Writer in His Time,” an exhibit sponsored by the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

“Twilight of the Idol:  Rare Photos of Hemingway in Cuba” from the Life magazine archives

Places

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Michael Palin’s Hemingway Adventure from PBS

“The Young Boy and the Sea:  Ernest Hemingway’s Visit to Nantucket Island” by Susan F. Beegel, an article originally published in the January 1985 Historic Nantucket

Arkansas

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“Ernest Hemingway and Piggott, Arkansas” by Renie Burghardt for the Literary Traveler

Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center in Piggott, Arkansas

Cuba

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“Cuba:  The Hemingway Trail” posted by Anvitha Pillai for the Sophia College Journalism Project

Hemingway and Cuba, an interview with the granddaughter of Hemingway’s editor, Maxwell Perkins, for NPR’s 25 Sept. 2002 All Things Considered

“Hemingway Haunts Old Havana” by Christopher P. Baker for Moon Travel Guides

“Hemingway in Cuba” by Robert Manning for the August 1965 Atlantic

“Hemingway’s Boat Captain Still the Old Man, as Anyone (Willing to Pay) Can See” by Mireya Navarro for the New York Times News Service 27 June 1999

“Hitting Cuba’s Famed ‘Hemingway Trail’” by Tripatini

“An Interesting Tour in Hemingway’s Trail in Havana” on Cuba Wanderer

“The Making of the Letters of Ernest Hemingway:  A Visit to Cuba,” a two-minute video posted by Cambridge University Press, North America

Mariel Hemingway’s Visit to Her Grandfather’s Home in Cuba with Natalie Morales, posted to Youtube by Mariel Hemingway

“On Hemingway’s Trail in Havana” for Travelingtales.com

“On the Hemingway Trail in Old Havana” by Barry Evetts for Travelworld International Magazine

“Saving Hemingway’s Cuban Legacy” by Indira A.R. Lakshamanan of the Boston Globe for the 8 September 2005 International Herald Tribune

“Travels in Cuba:  Cigars, Salsa, and Hemingway” by Celine O’Malley for Bootsnall.com, “the ultimate resource for the independent traveller”

“Twilight of the Idol:  Rare Photos of Hemingway in Cuba” from the Life magazine archives

“Why Hemingway Still Matters to Cubans,” by John Zarrella for CNN 21 July 1999

Idaho

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Hemingway Haunts in Idaho

“Hemingway in Idaho” by Bill Croke for American Spectator

Hemingway in Sun Valley

“Hemingway’s Ketchum” by David Frey in the Fall 2010 Sun Valley Magazine

“A Moveable Feast:  Travel Adventure in Ketchum, Idaho”

“Silver Creek–Jack’s Private Idaho” by Ken Retallic for the Sun Valley Guide

“The Sun Also Sets:  A Visit to Hemingway’s Grave and Memorial,” by Frank Bures for the Literary Traveler

Kansas City

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“Ernest Hemingway and Kansas City:   Famous Landmarks–A Writer’s Haunts: Where He Worked and Where He Lived” by Brian Burnes for the Kansas City Star

“Ernest Hemingway and Kansas City:  A Literary Tour”

“Heretofore Unpublished Observations Give Character, Sense of Place to KC,” written by Steve Paul and published in the 21 July 1999 Kansas City Star

“In 1928 in Kansas City, Hemingway Gained a Son and a Novel Insight,” by Brian Burnes for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

Key West

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Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum in Key West, Florida

“Hemingway Aura Still Big Draw in Trendy Key West” by Ron Butler for GreatestEscapes.com Travel Webzine

“Hemingway’s 100th Birthday Key West Tour” by John M. Taylor

A Moveable Feast . . . The Hemingway Days Festival

Michigan

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“Ernest Hemingway in Michigan”

“Hemingway in Seney” by Jack Jobst in Vol. 74 No. 6 of Michigan History Magazine

“Hemingway’s Young Summers” in August 2007 Traverse Magazine and updated for Upnorth.com

“Places Where Hemingway Fished in Michigan” by William Burr for the Literary Traveler

“Tour Hemingway’s Michigan” from Pure Michigan, the state’s official travel and tourism website

“Windemere on Walloon:  Where the Sun Also Rises” by Beth Ann Piehl for the July/August 2009 issue of Home Life:  An Up North Magazine

“The Young Man and the Lakes” by John J. Miller for the 14 Aug. 2008 Wall Street Journal

Oak Park

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The Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park, Hemingway’s birthplace museum in Illinois

Pamplona, Spain

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“Dangerous Spring:  Ernest Hemingway’s Spain,” by Leigh Ann Henion of the 29 March 2009 Washington Post

“Hemingway in Pamplona” by John Affleck for the Literary Traveler

“Hemingway on Spain:  Unedited Reportage” by Herbert Mitgang for the 30 Aug. 1998 New York Times(requires free registration)

“The Old Man and the City:  Hemingway’s Love Affair with Pamplona” by Chris Leadbeater in the 2 July 2011 Independent

Paris

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“Hemingway in Paris–Boxing” in the 6 July 1961 New York Times (requires free registration)

“Hemingway’s Paris” from DiscoverFrance.net

Hemingway’s Paris, a blog

“Hemingway’s Paris:  A Hypertext Resource” (which includes an online seminar, a biographical sketch, a timeline of Hemingway in Paris, and a brief bibliography) created by Steven M. Lane of Malaspina University-College

“Paris on My Mind:  Why Ernest Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast Is Great Literary Comfort Food” by Don George for the 2 June 1999 salon.com

“Sylvia Beach’s Shakespeare & Company:  A Mecca for Contemporary Literature” by Virginie Raguenaud for LiteraryTraveler.com

“There is Never Any End to Paris” by Lewis Galantiere for the 10 May 1964 New York Times (requires free registration)

Educational Products

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“Ernest Hemingway:  Famous Authors Series,” a 30-minute video

Gourmetfly.com on Fly Fishing in Spain

HarperAudio recordings of Hemingway’s voice and writings

The Hemingway Cookbook by Craig Boreth

Hemingway Newsletter published by the International Hemingway Society

Hemingway Review, a journal published by the International Hemingway Society

Lost Generation Bookstore

Remembering Ernest Hemingway by James Plath and Frank Simons with a foreword by Lorian Hemingway

Recipes, Food, and Drinks

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Absinthe FAQ

“Feasts Fit for a Writer,” a discussion of The Hemingway Cookbook by Craig Boreth (including a link to a recipe for Lime Ice), published in the University of Pennsylvania’s Gazette, an alumni publication

Hemingway Daiquiri from The Webtender:  An Online Bartender

“How to Cook Hemingway Trout” from Trails.com

Recordings

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Audio Interview with Jack Hemingway about Ernest Hemingway, a 24-minute MP3 file, by Don Swaim, 15 May 1986

Everybody Was So Young, an interview with Amanda Vaill, author of a biography of Gerald and Sara Murphy, for NPR’s All Things Considered 20 June 1998

Harry Reasoner on Hemingway’s Death, posted by Old Time Radio

Hemingway and Cuba, an interview with the granddaughter of Hemingway’s editor, Maxwell Perkins, for NPR’s 25 Sept. 2002 All Things Considered

The Hemingway Book Club of Kosovo, by Paula Huntley, discussed on NPR’s 10 Feb. 2003 Talk of the Nation

Hemingway Centenary, featuring Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, Lillian Ross (who interviewed Hemingway for the New Yorker), and Patrick Hemingway, for NPR’s 21 July 1999 Talk of the Nation

Hemingway Cookbook, an interview with author Craig Boreth for NPR’s All Things Considered

Hemingway Look-Alike Society on NPR’s 24 July 1999 Weekend Edition

Hemingway reads an excerpt from The Fifth Column, posted by salon.com in cooperation with HarperAudio (in MP3 and Real Media streaming formats)

Hemingway’s 100th Birthday, a 21 July 1999 presentation on NPR’s Morning Edition

Hemingway’s Basement Unsealed, a report on the opening of the basement of Hemingway’s ranch in Cuba, for NPR’s 14 Nov. 2002 All Things Considered

Hemingway’s writing philosophy, for 15 July 1999 All Things Considered on NPR

An interview with the producer of the IMAX film of The Old Man and the Sea for NPR’s 3 Sept. 1999 All Things Considered

Julian Barnes reads “Homage to Switzerland” by Ernest Hemingway for the Guardian’s collection of short story podcasts

Letter from Ernest Hemingway to Ezra Pound, written January 21, 1931, recorded as part of the American Letters series of Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University

Novelist, biographer and screenwriter A.E. Hotchner, an interview with NPR

The Old Man and the Sea, an NPR interview with Hemingway biographer Jeffrey Meyers after the death of Gregorio Fuentes in 2002

Review of Martha Gellhorn:  A Twentieth-Century American Life by Caroline Moorehead, by Maureen Corrigan for NPR’s 20 Oct. 2003 Fresh Air

Review of True at First Light by Alan Cheuse for NPR’s All Things Considered 19 July 1999

Simply Hemingway, with podcasts reviewing audiobooks of Donald Sutherland readingThe Old Man and the Sea, John Slattery reading A Farewell to Arms, and James Naughton reading from A Moveable Feast

Relatives

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Audio Interview with Jack Hemingway about Ernest Hemingway, a 24-minute MP3 file, by Don Swaim, 15 May 1986

Grace Hall Hemingway page hosted by the Illinois Women Artists Project

“Hemingway and Me at the Paris Ritz” by Gentry Lane 7 Sept. 1999 for salon.com

“The Hemingway Suicide Curse” by Lou Marano for UPI.com

“Hemingway’s Early Life:  A Conversation with Hemingway’s Nephew, John Sanford” by Allie Baker for the Hemingway Project

“An Interview with John Hemingway, author of the memoir, Strange Tribe,” by Allie Baker for the Hemingway Project

“Obituary:  Jack Hemingway” from the 4 Dec. 2000 Guardian Unlimited

” ‘Papa’ Hemingway as Seen by a Son,” written by Patrick Hemingway for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“Silver Creek–Jack’s Private Idaho” by Ken Retallic for the Sun Valley Guide

The Strange Saga of Gregory Hemingway

Walk on Water:  A Memoir, by Lorian Hemingway, daughter of Ernest’s son Gregory, reviewed by Carol Peace Robins in the 17 May 1998 New York Times

“Uncle Tyler Hemingway:  KC Connections,” written by Brian Burnes for the 27 June 1999 Kansas City Star

“Was Hemingway’s Mother a Lesbian?” by Marie J. Kuda from 13.14 (8 Sept. 1999) Outlines, pages 20 and 32

Teaching Resources

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Ernest Hemingway television programming on C-Span American Writers II, the Twentieth Century, includes, via streaming video, a 37-minute tour of the National Portrait Gallery exhibit on Hemingway, a forty-minute interview with the late Hemingway biographer Michael Reynolds, and a two-hour television program featuring Susan Beegel, editor of the Hemingway Review, and Linda Patterson Miller, author of Letters from the Lost Generation

The Heath Online Instructor’s Guide to Ernest Hemingway (emphasizes “Hills Like White Elephants” and A Farewell to Arms) by Margaret Anne O’Connor and John Alberti

“Ideas for Teaching Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast“ by Alan Filreis

“Learning Guide to For Whom the Bell Tolls“ from Teach with Movies

“Teaching Hemingway’s ‘Hills’ “ by Steven M. Lane of Malaspina University-College

Writers and Artists Associated with Hemingway

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Contemporaries

(See also “Martha Gellhorn,” above)

The Sherwood Anderson Foundation Home Page

Natalie Clifford Barney by Kay Keys

Dot City:  Dorothy Parker’s New York” from the Dorothy Parker Society of New York

“Gertrude and Alice,” an article about Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas written by Amy Benfer for 17 Nov. 1999 salon.com

Beautiful and Damned, a musical based on the lives of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald

F. Scott Fitzgerald Centenary Home Page from the University of South Carolina

The F. Scott Fitzgerald Society

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Sensible Thing,” with information about Zelda Fitzgerald as well, hosted by PBS

Featured Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald with news and reviews from the archives of the New York Times

“Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and The Sun Also Rises” written by Paige Grande for Literary Traveler

“Hemingway, the Fitzgeralds, and the Lost Generation:  An Interview with Kirk Curnutt” by Allie Baker for the Hemingway Project

Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum in Montgomery, Alabama

Zelda Fitzgerald:  The Roaring ’20s Icon by Sara Hodon for LiteraryTraveler.com

James Joyce Center in Dublin, Ireland

The James Joyce Society

Beryl Markham Links

“Ezra Pound” from the Electronic Poetry Center, hosted by SUNY Buffalo

Dawn Powell, a page hosted by the Library of America

“Edmund Wilson:  Classic and Commercial,” a Pace University website edited by David Castronovo and designed by Robert Bove’

Influences

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“Cezanne, Paul” from the WebMuseum in Paris

“Hemingway’s Debt to Cezanne:  New Perspectives” by Theodore L. Galliard, Jr., in the Spring 1999 issue ofTwentieth-Century Literature

“Rudyard Kipling 1865-1936″ from the Kipling Society

“The Importance of T.E. Lawrence” by David Gromkin for the Sept. 1991 issue of the New Criterion Online

The T.E. Lawrence Society, Lawrence of Arabia, 1888-1935

“The Jack London Collection” by Sarah and Darius Anderson of Sonoma, California

“The Jack London Online Collection” sponsored by Sonoma State University Library

“Musee Rodin,” a French museum devoted to the art of Auguste Rodin

“Theodore Roosevelt” from the White House website

“Theodore Roosevelt:  Icon of the American Century” from the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Literary Heirs

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Featured Author:  Joyce Carol Oates with news and reviews from the archives of the New York Times

Tim O’Brien, Novelist

“Raymond Carver, 1938-1988,” from Books and Writers

“The Things They Carried as Composite Novel” by Farrell O’Gorman, in War, Literature, and the Arts