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Articles About Ernest Hemingway 紐約時報

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Articles About Ernest Hemingway
From the Archives of The New York Times


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  • Obituary and Related Articles
  • Interviews
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  • Featured Author: Ernest Hemingway

  • Hemingway Collection/ JFK Library, Boston
    Ernest Hemingway checks a map during the Second World War.

    NEWS ARTICLES

  • Boston Police Bar Scribner's Magazine (June 6, 1929)
    The June issue of Scribner's Magazine was barred from bookstands in Boston because of objections to an installment of Hemingway's serial, "A Farewell to Arms."

  • Ernest Hemingway Hurt (November 3, 1930)
    Hemingway suffered a fractured right arm in an automobile accident near Billings. He was accompanied by John Dos Passos.

  • Hemingway Here, Avid For Lion Hunt (April 4, 1934)
    Returning from a safari in East Africa, Hemingway told a reporter, "The lion is a fine animal. He is not afraid or stupid. He does not want to fight, but sometimes man makes him."

  • Hemingway Slaps Eastman In Face (August 14, 1937)
    A literary rivalry with Max Eastman came to blows. Both contenders claimed victory.

  • Hemingway Off to Spain (August 15, 1937)
    Before departing to cover the Spanish Civil War, Hemingway gave his account of the scuffle with Eastman.

  • Eastman Claims Title (August 16, 1937)
    In Eastman's version of the "little literary disagreement," the fight ended with "Ernest on his back, both shoulders touching the floor, and me on top of him."

  • Literary Slug Fests (August 17, 1937)
    A jocular Times Editorial suggested that a Hemingway-Eastman rematch "really ought to be staged in Carnegie Hall for the benefit of the Nobel Peace Fund or something."

  • Hemingway Writes Play in Shell-Rocked Madrid (November 15, 1937)
    The Times published a notice announcing that Hemingway had completed "The Fifth Column."

  • Hemingway Wins Bout (March 14, 1938)
    Hemingway entered the ring as referee and left it the winner of a decision.

  • Hemingway Returns, Tired of War in Spain (May 31, 1938)
    Hemingway ended his reporting on the Spanish Civil War to write fiction in his home in Key West, Fla.

  • Hemingway Weds Magazine Writer (November 22, 1940)
    Martha Gellhorn was Hemingway's third wife.

  • Hemingway Is Injured (May 26, 1944)
    Hemingway was injured after his car struck a water tank.

  • Hemingway Leaves Hospital (May 30, 1944)
    A short notice in The Times covered Hemingway's recovery from the accident.

  • Hemingway 'Captures' 6 (August 4, 1946)
    While covering the war in Europe, Hemingway, in the words of a wire report, "tossed hand-grenades into the house [where German soldiers were hiding] and six of Hitler's supermen piled out and surrendered to Hemingway."

  • Hemingway Novel Slated For March (October 13, 1949)
    Charles Scribner's Sons announced the imminent publication of Hemingway's first novel in nearly a decade.

  • 1953 Pulitzer Prizes Won By Hemingway and 'Picnic' (May 5, 1953)
    "The Old Man and the Sea" won the 1953 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.


    The Associated Press
    Hemingway with Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro in Havana, May 15, 1960.
  • Hemingway and Wife Are Reported Safe After Two Plane Crashes in East Africa (January 25, 1954)
    Traveling in the upper Nile area, Hemingway's charter plane went down, then the rescue plane also crashed.

  • Hemingway Out of the Jungle; Arm Hurt, He Says Luck Holds (January 26, 1954)
    An injured Hemingway joked after the plane accidents, "My luck, she is running very good."

  • Hemingway Signs to Appear in Film (September 2, 1954)
    Hemingway signed a deal to write and appear in a motion picture about big-game hunting in Africa.

  • Hemingway Prefers Bulls to Soviet Trip (September 10, 1959)
    "Why should I go to Russia while there is bullfighting in Spain?" said Hemingway in response to an invitation to visit the Soviet Union.

  • Hemingway In Hospital (January 11, 1961)
    Six months before his death, Hemingway entered a hospital under mysterious circumstances after a hunting trip near Sun Valley, Idaho.

  • Widow Describes Hemingway Mss. (July 9, 1961)
    Mary Hemingway revealed that Hemingway's papers included at least two unpublished novels and poetry.

  • Graham Judges Hemingway (July 10, 1961)
    The Rev. Dr. Billy Graham told a fair grounds audience that although Ernest Hemingway had been "the greatest writer of our time," he had been "a frail man, empty, afraid."

  • A Hemingway Treasure Chest (July 16, 1961)
    This is a series of excerpts from "The Sun Also Rises," "A Farewell to Arms," "The Snows of Kilimanjaro," "For Whom the Bell Tolls" and "The Old Man and the Sea."

  • Mrs. Hemingway is Cautious on Publication of Manuscripts (July 29, 1961)
    Mary Hemingway began going through Hemingway's papers, looking for instructions about what could be published and what should be destroyed.

  • A Letter From Glenway Westcott (August 9, 1961)
    In a letter to The Times, Glenway Westcott urged Mary Hemingway not to destroy Hemingway's manuscripts.

  • Hemingway Wrote His Will in Legal Style (August 25, 1961)
    In his will, Hemingway left his entire estate to his widow Mary.

  • Hemingway Mss. are Shipped Here (August 31, 1961)
    Mary Hemingway reiterated that she would make decisions about publishing Hemingway's manuscripts based on his written instructions.

  • Manuscripts Hemingway Left May Yield Four More Novels (March 9, 1962)
    "I loved them, I'm mad about them," said Mary Hemingway about the unpublished novels left in Hemingway's papers.

  • Hemingway Estate $1.4 Million; Widow is His Lone Beneficiary (February 22, 1964)
    Financial details of Hemingway's estate were made public after forms were filed with a state tax commission.

  • Publishing F.B.I. File on Hemingway (March 11, 1983)
    In researching a biography, Jeffrey Meyers turned up new evidence of an effort by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to discredit Ernest Hemingway in his attempt to spy on potential Nazi sympathizers in Cuba during World War II.

  • Hemingway's Status Revives Among Scholars and Readers (July 26, 1983)
    Twenty-two years after his death, Hemingway's book sales and critical reputation were enjoying a revival.

  • New Hemingway Book on Matadors (January 2, 1985)
    After appearing in installments in Life magazine in 1960, "The Dangerous Summer" was finally brought out by Charles Scribner's Sons 25 years later.

  • An Award in Honor of Hemingway (January 11, 1985)
    Underwritten by the Sultan of Brunei, the $50,000 Ritz Paris Hemingway Award was established to recognize the novel that best exemplifies the Hemingway tradition of excellence each year.

  • 5 Unpublished Stories in Hemingway Book (July 25, 1985)
    Peter Griffin told a reporter that five previously unpublished short stories by a youthful Ernest Hemingway would appear in his biography.

  • New Hemingway Novel To Be Published in May (December 17, 1985)
    Charles Scribner's Sons announced the publication of "The Garden of Eden," which it described as Hemingway's "last unpublished major work."

  • Hemingway on Spain: Unedited Reportage (August 30, 1988)
    Thirty dispatches written by Ernest Hemingway while reporting on the Spanish Civil War were published in The Hemingway Review for the first time exactly as he wrote them.

  • Hemingway Typescripts and Letters Are Found (August 17, 1989)
    A cache of Hemingway memorabilia was acquired by a collector who stumbled on a fragment of the material two years ago and traced it to its source.

  • Finding Hemingway's 'Lost' Articles (March 9, 1992)
    The Toronto Star published a special section of "lost" articles by its most famous employee, dispatches that have not appeared in any Hemingway collections.

  • A Hemingway Story, and Just as Fictional (January 26, 1997)
    The movie "In Love and War," depicted Hemingway's romance with Agnes von Kurowsky, a relationship that formed the basis "A Farewell to Arms."

  • Hemingway's Latest: A Blend of Life, Fiction and an African Bride (August 24, 1998)
    After a long repose in the restricted files in the John F. Kennedy Library, "True at First Light," described as the last unpublished full-length work by Ernest Hemingway, was set for publication.

  • Hemingway Gets a Kick in a Kickoff (April 14, 1999)
    The authors, scholars and fans gathered for a Hemingway Centennial Conference had varying opinions on the wisdom and taste of producing a posthumous work like "True at First Light."

  • A Line of Hemingway Furniture, With a Veneer of Taste (June 15, 1999)
    Papa may not have approved, but Jack Hemingway came to town to promote the new Ernest Hemingway line of furniture.

    THE NOBEL PRIZE

  • Hemingway Is the Winner of Nobel Literature Prize (October 29, 1954)
    The fifth American author to receive the Prize, The Swedish Academy cited Hemingway "for his powerful, style-forming mastery of the art of modern narration."

  • Hemingway's Quality Built On a Stern Apprenticeship (October 29, 1954)
    Charles Poore writes that Hemingway's legend tends to obscure the fact that his "his apprenticeship and accomplishment as a man of letters have been no less rigorous than those of his leading academic peers."

  • '54 Noble Prizes Awarded By King (December 11, 1954)
    Hemingway, recuperating in Cuba, was unable to attend the Nobel ceremony, but sent a written message that said that a writer "must face eternity or the lack of it each day."
  • Audio: Hemingway's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech

  • The New York Times
    Hemingway's obituary ran on the front page of The New York Times on July 3, 1961.
    OBITUARY

  • Hemingway Dead of Shotgun Wound; Wife Says He Was Cleaning Weapon (July 3, 1961)
    After being found dead of a shotgun wound, Mary Hemingway issued a statement that the death was accidental, but there was speculation that it was suicide.

  • Hemingway's Prize-Winning Works Reflected Preoccupation With Life and Death (July 3, 1961)
    Hemingway's obituary summarized his life and career.

  • Charles Poore on Hemingway (July 3, 1961)
    In this appreciation, Charles Poore says that Hemingway's style "did something to change the course of storytelling in our century."

  • Authors and Critics Appraise Works (July 3, 1961)
    This is 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.

  • A Giant Passes (July 3, 1961)
    A Times Editorial page tribute calls Hemingway as "a long-enduring figure on America's literary Mount Rushmore."

  • Hemingway Inquest Is Ruled Out After Authorities Talk to Family (July 4, 1961)
    The coroner decided against an inquest after talking with the prosecuting attorney and the Hemingway family. The death certificate would read: "Self-inflicted gunshot wounds in the head."

  • Services Slated for Hemingway (July 5, 1961)
    Arrangements were made for the funeral of Hemingway, whose three divorces made him ineligible for Catholic Church rites.

  • Hemingway In Paris -- Boxing (July 6, 1961)
    In an article discussing some of his literary friendships, Hemingway is said to have called Joyce's "Ulysses" "a most goddam wonderful book."

  • Service Is Held for Hemingway (July 7, 1961)
    Hemingway was buried in a simple, private graveside service attended only by his wife, members of his immediate family and about fifty invited friends.

    INTERVIEWS

  • Hemingway Sees Defeat of Franco (May 19, 1937)
    Back in America after covering the Spanish Civil War, Hemingway predicted the eventual triumph of the Loyalists.

  • Ernest Hemingway Talks of Work and War (August 11, 1940)
    After delivering the manuscript of "For Whom the Bell Tolls," Hemingway told a reporter "'To Have and Have Not,' was not so good." After 17 months work on the novel, he added "I'm broke."

  • The Position of Ernest Hemingway (July 31, 1949)
    In response to Maxwell Geismar's questions, Hemingway responded "A long time ago I found it was bad to discuss work you are engaged on."
  • Maxwell Geismar's Response
  • Talk With Ernest Hemingway (September 7, 1952)
    In an interview, Hemingway said, "In writing I have moved through arithmetic, through plane geometry and algebra, and now I am in calculus. If they don't understand that, to hell with them."

  • The Sun Also Rises In Stockholm (November 7, 1954)
    In an interview about his reaction to the award, Hemingway said "As a Nobel Prize winner I cannot but regret that the award was never given to Mark Twain, nor to Henry James."

  • A Moveable Interview (December 6, 1964)
    Cleveland Amory constructs a "posthumous interview" with Hemingway based on excerpts from "The Moveable Feast."

    CRITICAL ESSAYS

  • Speaking of Books (September 24, 1950)
    J. Donald Adams surveys critical reaction to "Across the River and Into the Trees," a book which, he concludes, marks "a dead end."

  • 25 Years of a Hemingway Classic (April 29, 1951)
    Carlos Baker looks back on the initial reactions to "The Sun Also Rises," which, he says, missed the point by focusing on the autobiographical aspects of the novel.

  • Speaking of Books (July 16, 1961)
    Calling him "the Byron of our time," J. Donald Adams writes of Hemingway "it would have been anti-climactic had Hemingway died in his bed."

  • Was 'Papa' a Truly Great Writer? (July 1, 1962)
    A year after Hemingway's death, Maxwell Geismar assessed the durability of his literary reputation.

  • The Making of the Book: A Chronicle and a Memoir by Mary Hemingway (May 10, 1964)
    Mary Hemingway recalls life with Hemingway during the time he was writing "A Moveable Feast."

  • A Search for the Man As He Really Was (July 26, 1964)
    At work on his biography, Carlos Baker explains the difficulties of writing a life of Hemingway.

  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez Meets Ernest Hemingway (July 26, 1981)
    "That consciousness of technique is unquestionably the reason Hemingway won't achieve glory with his novels, but will with his more disciplined short stories."

  • Television; Reading Hemingway With One Eye Closed (April 24, 1988)
    James R. Mellow discusses "Hemingway," a TV miniseries based on Hemingway's relationships with women.

  • Reading Hemingway Without Guilt by Frederick Busch (January 12, 1992)
    In this defense of Hemingway, Busch writes, "He is so very incorrect, except in this: he gave the century a way of making literary art that dealt with the remarkable violence of our time."

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