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Ernest Hemingway

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:2,000.00 - 4,000.00 USD
Ernest Hemingway

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Auction Date:2018 Dec 05 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Extensively hand-corrected TLS signed twice as “Ernesto,” two pages, 8.5 x 11, Finca Vigia, San Francisco de Paula, Cuba letterhead, December 4, 1950. Letter to his personal trainer, boxing coach, and friend George Brown, the owner of a gymnasium on West Fifty-seventh Street in Manhattan, in full: “Just found your letter, boy, and hasten to answer. Thanks for all the news of the wicked city. If they are operating on [Shipwreck] Kelly again is a sure sign we will be at war shortly. When will they start operating on Earl Smith? Or is he too old?

Every form of nonsense down here but no news of any kind. Never believe anything your read in the funny papers. Never believe anything you hear on the radio. Never even believe anything I tell you unless I say am leveling and now am leveling. How did that storm do by you? Hope it didn't blow the gym down. See book is still leading the sellers but don’t know what sort of a race it is; maybe they are selling platers. Will know eventually Scribner lost all his staff. Sales manager, advertising manager or every other type of manager around the joint and so the horse doesn’t get much of a ride. [He is called back I get to work for him it has to be varied and good lone cemetery] [Hemingway writes a line in the border: “Dear George: This secretary is nuts. It sounds like the last ravings of Dutch Schultz. Ernesto”] but the book seems to keep selling anyway. I have one for you but I want to write it and so we'll wait till I get to town.

[Have kept eye of all fights here and inclined] Have been such a good boy that most of my old friends won’t speak to me. How do you feel about fighting the Chinese? I think you are just the man. Do you want to join Hemingstein and Browns amphibious raiders all complete with straight left hooks. We can make Kelly our leader; he certainly is probably anfibious, and Brenda could design the uniforms. The only trouble with this project is that I've been in China before. Therefore am not too enthusiastic. But why shouldn't we do something sometime that we are not enthusiastic about? Wish you were down here. Have the weight down to 207 the blood pressure 165 over 75 and then in good shape except for a cold in the chest from that last storm that we got down here. Had nearly an eighth of an inch of salt over all the top of the Pilar from the spray even when we were tied up with four anchors inside of the cove down the coast. Ideal weather for west 57th Street mariners. All your friends down here send you their best. And wish that we can make another big dove shoot.

We are going to shoot birds at the club tomorrow and stay here through Christmas and try to have Pat and Gigi [Hemingway’s sons Patrick and Gregory] down if possible. Had planned to go to Sun Valley but various things made it impossible. Andrés is here for lunch and is at present drinking a Black Tom which is named after that famous explosion in the first war. Mar is find [sic] and sends her love. We have some very nice friends visiting us and the place is cheerful and the weather now, after the storm, is fine. Fixed the pool up with one of those water purifying establishments so that it now looks all the time like Varadero beach. The hell of it is that is too cold to go swimming. Some hardy guy like you could do it but I’m waiting for spring or hot weather. My specialty was always those hot senders [Hemingway writes in the border: “What the hell does this mean? Try to figure it out. I’m through, EH”]. Do you have Coronel [sic] Sweeny’s address. He wrote me from the hotel Chatham but I do not know whether he was living there or out in the country. Thought he might have written just on Chatham’s stationary [sic] while he was waiting to go out. I wrote Scribners but Charley Scribner has been unable to locate him. I have an important letter to write him.

Give my best to anybody that I know about town. Did you see the piece that I wrote about Ezzard, Honest Ezzard for the Police Gazette. They wrote and asked me to write something to be read on a presentation with the belt but what I wrote was evidently not the thing they needed for that occasion they decided to publish it. Kid Tunero who was a pal of mine down here beat the——out of Ezzard spotting him 20 years and 25 pounds. Naturally the boy has imprved [sic] since then. Tunero was an old man and he only got $200.00 for the fight. Have good holidays and best always to you and yours.” At the conclusion, Hemingway adds “Mary sends her love” and a short postscript: “Dictated this into a Dictaphone. But the jerk who transcribed it must have been some relation to your man ‘Celery.’ EH.” In fine condition, with light toning to the edges. The book Hemingway refers to at the start is Across the River, which, despite earning paltry reviews by American critics in September 1950, managed to sell well and scale its way toward the top of the bestseller lists. At the time of this letter, a parade of guests rejuvenated Hemingway and he soon finished The Sea When Absent, the second part of a proposed four-part series on the sea. The fourth part, which was begun in early 1951, was removed and eventually turned into Hemingway’s most admired work, The Old Man and the Sea. The remaining three parts were posthumously published in 1970 as the novel Islands in the Stream.