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Hemingway's and father
According to Meyers an example of omission is that Renata, like other heroines in Hemingway's fiction, suffers a major " shock "— the murder of her father and the subsequent loss of her home — to which Hemingway alludes only briefly.
According to Meyers an example of omission is that Renata, like other heroines in Hemingway's fiction, suffers a major " shock "— the murder of her father and the subsequent loss of her home — to which Hemingway alludes only briefly.

Hemingway's and also
This stay was probably one of the fountain springs for Hemingway's novel The Sun also Rises.
Kennedy concluded Hemingway's " obsession " with indistinct gendering was central to his character, a conclusion also alleged by the critic Mark Spilka and biographer Kenneth Lynn.
The same year, Evans also caught the eye of Darryl F. Zanuck, who cast him as Pedro Romero in a film adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises, against the wishes of co-star Ava Gardner and Hemingway himself.
Belmonte was also a close friend of author Ernest Hemingway, and he appears prominently in two of Hemingway's books: Death in the Afternoon and The Sun Also Rises.
Hemingway's 2. 38 was not only a personal best, it was also a new Indoor Championship Meet Record and the highest indoor jump in the world that year.
Some critics have noted that Wilson chases down the buffalo in a car, violating the law and perhaps also Hemingway's code of fairness in hunting.
The same line is also quoted in Ernest Hemingway's 1950 novel Across the River and into the Trees, as well as referred to in his 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises.
Although there is no evidence at all ( other than the fact that Hopper admired the story ), Levin also suggests that he may have been inspired by Ernest Hemingway's 1927 short story, The Killers.
The store was also referenced in Hemingway's A Moveable Feast.

Hemingway's and suicide
" Robert Jordan's opinions on suicide may be used to analyze Hemingway's suicide 21 years later.
Berman and Wallace suggest that this may have been a ' copycat suicide '; on hearing of his friend Hemingway's suicide in 1961, Belmonte is said to have answered ' Well done.
After Hemingway's suicide, Scribner put out a collection called The Nick Adams Stories ( 1972 ) which contains many old stories already collected in The First Forty-Nine as well as some previously unpublished pieces ( much of it material that Hemingway clearly rejected ).
Mary Hemingway, however, stated that after Hemingway's suicide, the Cuban government contacted her in Idaho and announced that it intended to expropriate the house, along with all real property in Cuba.

Hemingway's and is
Hemingway's fiction is supported by a `` moral '' backbone and in its search for ultimate meaning hints at a religious dimension.
* October 15 – Ernest Hemingway's novel To Have and Have Not is first published.
An adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's novella of the same name, Hemingway's agent, Leland Hayward, had previously written to the author: " Of all Hollywood people, the one that comes the closest to me in quality, in personality and voice, in personal dignity and ability, is Spencer Tracy.
Hemingway biographer Jeffrey Meyers writes that the novel is regarded as one of Hemingway's best works, along with The Sun Also Rises, The Old Man and the Sea, and A Farewell to Arms.
One theory is that it comes from a line in Ernest Hemingway's novel " A Moveable Feast " where in describing a particularly annoying sound, Hemingway remarks that it " was no worse than other noises, certainly better than Ezra learning to play the bassoon.
Hemingway's portrayal of the evening is considered one of the defining images of Montparnasse at the time.
In the Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway's 1952 novel The Old Man and the Sea, the central character of the work is an aged Cuban fisherman who, after 84 days without success on the water, heads out to sea to break his run of bad luck.
* In Ernest Hemingway's short story A Way You'll Never Be, Captain Paravicini says to Nick, the protagonist who is suffering from psychological instability following a head wound, " I said it should have been trepanned.
* The Sun Also Rises ( 1926 ) by Ernest Hemingway is a disguised account of Hemingway's literary life in Paris and his 1925 trip to Spain with several known personalities.
With the sun setting over the desert, Somerset quotes Ernest Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls: The world is a fine place and worth fighting for.
* Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris ( 2011 ) is partly set in the Paris of the 1920s evoked in Hemingway's book.
Beginning with that journey to India undertaken in 1956, at the age of 24, without any foreign-language skills ( he is said to have learned English only afterwards – by reading, with the help of a dictionary, a copy of Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls ), he travelled across the developing world, at first producing " essays in frustration and ignorance " ( in the words of Colin Thubron ), though later reporting more knowledgeably on wars, coups and revolutions in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas
and A Fable, Ernest Hemingway's Islands in the Streams, J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, Malcolm Lowry's Under the Volcano, William Styron's Lie Down in Darkness and The Confessions of Nat Turner, John Ball's In the Heat of the Night, Colleen McCullough's The Thorn Birds, Yasunari Kawabata's The Lake, John Updike's Rabbit Redux and Rabbit is Rich, and The Inheritors, Pincher Martin, The Spire, The Pyramid and Rites of Passage by William Golding.
Fuentes is credited by some as a model for Hemingway's protagonist, Santiago, in The Old Man and the Sea, though this is most likely the result of Fuentes ' longevity and how he purposefully grew into the incarnation of the role of Santiago for tourists visiting Cojimar.
This is concluded by the sonnet, A Farewell to Arms, quoted by Thackeray in the seventy-sixth chapter of The Newcomes and which served as the title of Ernest Hemingway's novel of the same name.
Ernest Hemingway's novel A Farewell to Arms ( 1929 ), which is set in northeast Italy during World War I, is credited with bringing the word into the English language.
In contrast to Hemingway's grand house in Old Town, the Williams home at 1431 Duncan Street in the " unfashionable " New Town neighborhood is a very modest bungalow.
" This is almost always the main character — e. g., Gabriel in Joyce's The Dead, Nathaniel Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown, or the elderly fisherman in Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea.
The first English-language text to contain the word cojones as a metaphor for bravery is Ernest Hemingway's 1932 book on bullfighting, Death in the Afternoon.
One recent seminar is " Rebels With a Cause ", an exploration of the motivations and convictions of literary protagonists " willing to die for a cause ", and includes analysis of Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, and Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
* A Farewell to Arms ( 1932 )-This Borzage-directed adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's novel has fallen into the public domain and is available online through the Internet Archive.

Hemingway's and theme
" The theme of death is central in Hemingway's writings and Stoltzfus argues that in Hemingway's fictional characters achieve redemption at the moment of death if death is faced with authenticity which is a form of existentialism.

Hemingway's and works
Comparisons between Winesburg, Ohio and Jean Toomer's Cane ( 1923 ), Ernest Hemingway's In Our Time ( 1925 ), William Faulkner's Go Down Moses ( 1942 ), and several of John Steinbeck's works, among others, demonstrate the pervasiveness of the formal innovations made in Anderson's book.
She followed Hemingway's work with nine more books in 1932 included William Faulkner's Sanctuary, Kay Boyle's Year Before Last, Dorothy Parker's Laments for the Living, and Antoine de Saint-Exupery's Night-Flight along with works by Alain Fournier, Charles-Louis Philippe, Paul Eluard, George Grosz, Max Ernst, and C. G. Jung.
In the period to 1925 the Press published works including Pound's A Draft of XVI Cantos, Hemingway's in our time, William Carlos Williams's The Great American Novel, and Distinguished Air by Robert McAlmon.
" The result, she claims, does not " represent Hemingway's intentions in these works as he left them.
Because of its status as a symbol of high society and luxury, the hotel has featured in many notable works of fiction including the novels: F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tender Is The Night and Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises,
According to Hemingway's biographer, Carlos Baker, The Killers " was the first film from any of his works that Ernest could genuinely admire.
Benson says in Hemingway's fiction the distance is necessary, and successful in early fiction such as in The Sun Also Rises, but if he as " the author does not deliberately create such distance the fiction fails ", as in the later works such as Across the River and into the Trees.

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