That other Hemingway [Texte imprimé] : the master inventor / James D. Brasch, Monographie imprimée

Main Author: Brasch, James Daniel, 1929-...., AuteurLanguage: anglais.Country: Canada.Publication : [Victoria, B.C.] : Trafford, 2009Description: 1 vol. (xxvii-141 p.) : ill. ; 23 cmISBN: 978-1-426-91735-6; 1-426-91735-X.Abstract: "Provides a referenced handbook to accompany Hemingway's own library, as it demonstrates Hemingway's dependence on his massive library as a basis for what he called invention, ... The insights of his personal doctor and his longstanding correspondence with Malcolm Cowley and Bernard Berenson reveal his desperate loneliness in Cuba and allow him an opportunity to analyze and promote his own theory of fiction. All three sources are not available to critics or the general public. This discussion provides profound insight to his last 20 years of his previously ignored life in Cuba."--Back cover; "Provides a referenced handbook to accompany Hemingway's own library, as it demonstrates Hemingway's dependence on his massive library as a basis for what he called invention, ... The insights of his personal doctor and his longstanding correspondence with Malcolm Cowley and Bernard Berenson reveal his desperate loneliness in Cuba and allow him an opportunity to analyze and promote his own theory of fiction. All three sources are not available to critics or the general public. This discussion provides profound insight to his last 20 years of his previously ignored life in Cuba."--Back cover.Bibliography: Bibliogr. p. 139-140.Subject - Personal Name: Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961 Critique et interprétation | Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961 Correspondance | Berenson, Bernard, 1865-1959 Correspondance | Cowley, Malcolm, 1898-1989 Correspondance
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Prêt normal BU Chevreul
4ème étage : Langues
Anglais 810.07 Hemingway BRA (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 0378706096
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Bibliogr. p. 139-140

"Provides a referenced handbook to accompany Hemingway's own library, as it demonstrates Hemingway's dependence on his massive library as a basis for what he called invention, ... The insights of his personal doctor and his longstanding correspondence with Malcolm Cowley and Bernard Berenson reveal his desperate loneliness in Cuba and allow him an opportunity to analyze and promote his own theory of fiction. All three sources are not available to critics or the general public. This discussion provides profound insight to his last 20 years of his previously ignored life in Cuba."--Back cover

"Provides a referenced handbook to accompany Hemingway's own library, as it demonstrates Hemingway's dependence on his massive library as a basis for what he called invention, ... The insights of his personal doctor and his longstanding correspondence with Malcolm Cowley and Bernard Berenson reveal his desperate loneliness in Cuba and allow him an opportunity to analyze and promote his own theory of fiction. All three sources are not available to critics or the general public. This discussion provides profound insight to his last 20 years of his previously ignored life in Cuba."--Back cover

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