...Hemingway wrote that the world “breaks everyone,” and those “it does not break it kills.” “It kills the very good and very gentle and the very brave impartially,” he wrote. “If you are none of ...
Mr. Hemingway, we are still bet-ting on you. Published in the print edition of the October 28, 1933, issue. As part of an effort to make The New Yorker’s archive more accessible to readers, this story ...
Screenwriter and author Clancy Sigal explores Ernest Hemingway's life, work, and place in the always evolving modern literary canon. He discusses the author's appreciation for Teddy Roosevelt's brand ...
The Pfeiffers, formerly of St. Louis, bought this house when they moved to Piggott because it was the biggest one in town. The reason Ernest Hemingway has a connection to Arkansas is kind of juicy.
AFTER a splendid dinner at the finca outside Havana in the winter of 1954, Ernest and I were lingering over a crackling cold Sancerre. He was more subdued than usual, and suddenly he said, “Listen, ...
Ernest Hemingway lived and loved as passionately as he wrote, becoming as famous and fabled as his Nobel Prize-winning creations. In six enlightening, often harrowing hours over three nights, ...
In 1924 the critic Edmund Wilson did what critics are known to do on occasion: He heralded the arrival of a stunning new voice in American fiction. Reviewing Ernest Hemingway’s first two books, “Three ...
Senior editor at The Federalist Mollie Hemingway labeled the White House press corps and much of the political media "Democrat activists in the propaganda field" in a scathing column Wednesday, ...
Directors Ken Burns and Lynn Novick are promising a “nuanced” portrait of Ernest Hemingway in their three-part, six-hour documentary on the Nobel Prize-winning author coming to PBS in April. Speaking ...