When Ernest Hemingway won the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature, presenters called him 'one of this epoch’s great molders of style, ” praising his vivid dialogue and journalistic eye for 'robust details to accumulate and take on momentous significance.”
But even the Swedish Academy could not separate Hemingway the writer from Hemingway the adventurer. They also cited his 'manly love of danger and adventure, with a natural admiration for every individual who fights the good fight in a world of reality overshadowed by violence and death.”
From the 1920s until his death in 1961, 'Papa” Hemingway was a larger-than-life literary figure whose everyday exploits became legendary. He was a friend of celebrities, a war correspondent, journalist, renowned big-game hunter, record-setting saltwater angler, and hard-drinking brawler whose reputation preceded him.
Though Hemingway was and remains an American icon, he was also first and foremost a human being, as these striking black-and-white photos remind.
O autorze
James Plath teaches American literature, journalism, film, and creative writing at Illinois Wesleyan University. He is president of The John Updike Society and a Hemingway scholar who ran with the bulls in Pamplona at his first academic conference. By invitation he lectured at the Museo Ernest Hemingway in Cuba and served as director of The Hemingway Days Writer’s Workshop & Conference in Key West for 10 years. He also has a life. The father of six and grandfather of six, he enjoys spending time with family, travel, gardening, cooking, wine, fishing, (finishing) home projects, and cheering on the Chicago Bears, Blackhawks, Cubs, and Bulls.