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+22 +1
Ernest Hemingway's published works littered with errors, study claims
Experts find hundreds of errors in the writer’s works, mostly made by editors and typesetters
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+19 +1
How Hemingway Quarantined (Hint: It Was with his Wife, his Mistress, his Son and the Nanny)
Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald visited regularly for a cocktail but stayed on the far side of the fence lining the small front yard.
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The Extraordinary Life of Martha Gellhorn, the Woman Ernest Hemingway Tried to Erase
A maverick war correspondent, Hemingway's third wife was the only woman at D-Day. Her husband wanted her home in his bed. by Paula McLain.
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To Have and Have Not
On a recent afternoon in Boston, Betsy Fermano walked through an exhibition titled “Ernest Hemingway: Between Two Wars” at the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum. Among the artifacts—vintage photos, paintings, and handwritten stories from Hemingway—she spotted a family name in a manuscript on display: Coates.
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George Plimpton and Papa in Cuba
When Ernest Hemingway agreed to his famous Paris Review interview, he had no idea he’d be helping the CIA. By Joel Whitney.
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