Ernest Hemingway: A Literary Life includes new research on the best-known of the posthumous publications: A Moveable Feast, 1964 (and the 2009 A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition); Islands in the Stream, 1970; and The Garden of Eden, 1986. Linda Wagner-Martin provides background and intertextual readings—particularly of the way Hemingway’s unpublished stories (“Phillip Haines was a writer”) and his fiction from Men Without Women and Winner Take Nothing interface with the memoir. The revised edition also highlights and provides background on Hemingway’s treatment of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein, his life in Paris in the 1920s, and his connection to the poetry scene there—putting this in conversation with Mary Hemingway’s edits of A Moveable Feast. The new chapters also illuminate the reception of Islands in the Stream and a new way of understanding the role of gender and androgyny in The Garden of Eden. On a whole, the book draws from extensive archival research, particularly correspondence of all four of Hemingway’s wives.
Содержание
1. “‘Fraid a Nothing”.- 2. Eighteen and Fear: And Agnes.- 3. “Dear Ernesto”.- 4. The Route to
In Our Time: The Arrival.- 5. Of Babies and Books.- 6. Pauline Pfeiffer and Hadley Richardson Hemingway.- 7. Marriage in the Midst of
Men Without Women.- 8. A Farewell to Arms.- 9. The Bullfight as Center.- 10. Hemingway as the Man in Charge.- 11.
Esquire and Africa.- 12. Hemingway in the World.- 13. Martha Gellhorn and Spain.- 14. War in Europe and at Home.- 15. The Fourth Mrs. Hemingway.- 16. From Cuba to Italy.- 17. Old Men, Prizes, and Reports of Hemingway’s Death.- 18.
A Moveable Feast in Retrospect.- 19.
Islands in the Stream in Retrospect.- 20.
The Garden of Eden in Retrospect.- 21. Endings.
Об авторе
Linda Wagner-Martin is Frank Borden Hanes Professor of English and Comparative Literature Emerita at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, USA. She has written and edited more than eighty books, has won a number of teaching awards, and such grants as the Guggenheim, the Senior National Endowment for the Humanities, ACLS, Ford, and Rockefeller—and been a fellow at Bellagio, Bogliasco, and the Radcliffe Institute. She was awarded the Hubbell Medal for Lifetime Service to American Literature. In the Palgrave Macmillan Literary Lives series, she has published works on Emily Dickinson (2013), Sylvia Plath (2003), Toni Morrison (second edition, 2022), John Steinbeck (2017), and Walt Whitman (2021).