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Important Ernest Hemingway Archive

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:12,500.00 USD Estimated At:25,000.00 - 35,000.00 USD
Important Ernest Hemingway Archive
<Our item number 119520><B>Hemingway, Ernest.</B> &#40;1899-1961&#41; American novelist, short-story writer, and journalist; winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 for <I>The Old Man and the Sea</I> and the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature. An extensive archive consisting of approximately eighty letters from family, friends, his first wife, and acquaintances from his early years &#40;1914-1928&#41;, with a few other letters, including one from his third wife, up to 1941. Hemingway kept this group of letters with him until his death. The letters are housed in two loose-leaf notebooks; the condition is generally very good to fine. <BR><BR>Included in the collection are fourteen letters from Hemingway&#39;s mother, Grace Hall Hemingway and father, Clarence Hemingway &#40;he committed suicide in 1928&#41;, with references to Ernest&#39;s World War I war injuries and his recovery in a hospital in Italy in 1918. One ANS &#34;G.H.H.&#34; addressed to &#34;Lieut. Ernest Miller Hemingway, Section 4 Italian Ambulance Servi ce, American Red Cross….&#34; says, &#34;…<I>Write me all about your dear Red Cross nurse. Dougherty tells me you were quite devoted to one another</I>….&#34; Agnes von Kurowsky was Ernest&#39;s first love and their romance served as the basis of the love story in <I>A Farewell to Arms</I>, the most important novel to come out of World War I. In 1919, Clarence sends Ernest, among other things, &#34;<I>a new Underwood &#39;Black Ribbon</I>&#39;&#34;; Ernest kept this typewriter with him his entire life.<BR><BR>Two letters, from <I>The Saturday Evening Post</I> and <I>The Green Book Magazine</I>, are rejections of E.H.&#39;s earliest attempts at short-story writing, one letter offering specific criticisms to improve his work. There are five letters written by E.H.&#39;s first wife, Elizabeth Richarson &#34;Hadley&#34; Hemingway, between Dec. 28, 1921 and Mar. 20, 1925 to E.H.&#39;s parents. In 1922 she writes, &#34;.<I>.It&#39;s so wonderful being married but you&#39;re only half of twic e as big a personality!…I certainly love this child of yours and mine</I>….&#34; In Sept. 1923, she reports her pregnancy [their son John was born Oct. 10, 1923], and in April 1924 she writes that Gertrude Stein and Alice Toclaz are the baby&#39;s godparents: &#34;[they] <I>are wonderful godparents - over here every few days to see his progress and make the right suggestions at the right moments….Ernie…is making a great name for himself among literary people everywhere. Ford Maddox Ford, editor of the Transatlantic Review, the man who taught Joseph Conrad to write English, said to him yesterday…&#39;Monsieur, you will have a great name in no time at all!</I>. In March 1925, she reports the news that &#34;<I>Boni and Livwright had taken Ernest&#39;s book of short stories, In Our Time….He has a big fishing story, The Big Two-Hearted River coming out in the opening number of This Quarter, an American & English magazine that promises to do well over here. It is on sale in the states too. A lso a story,The Undefeated &#40;Bullfighter&#39;s tale&#41; in Der Gruschnitt March or April number</I>….&#34;<BR><BR>Martha Gelhorn, E.H.&#39;s third wife, wrote his mother from Cuba in 1941, referring to their trip to China and noting that &#34;<I>Ernest is…getting the first real rest now since he finished his book</I>….&#34; The book is probably Hemingway&#39;s 1940 novel, <I>For Whom the Bell Tolls</I>. <BR>Estimated Value &#36;25,000-35,000. <I><BR>Ex Collection of Jonathan Goodwin.</I> <BR><BR>Our item number 119520<BR><IMAGES><P ALIGN="CENTER"><IMG SRC="http://www.goldbergcoins.net/liveauction/43jpegs/119520.jpg"> </P></IMAGES>