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in Sept. 1921 following their honeymoon, Ernest Hemingway & 1st wife Hadley Richardson Hemingway lived on the 4th floor of the building on left
"In Chicago, Hadley's married life began in a cramped, shabby apartment in a poor neighborhood. The grimy, top-floor walk-up was at 1239 North Dearborn Street in a run-down section of [Chicago]. Hadley found the tiny rooms and ugly, broken-down furniture depressing, and she tried to be away from the apartment as much as possible.” Paris Without End: The True Story of Hemingway's First Wife By Gioia Diliberto
Harry’s Bar
Calle Vallaresso, 1323
30124 Venezia Italy
Tel : +39 (0) 41 528 5777
Contact : harrysbar@cipriani.com
Connu internationalement, la réputation du Harry’s Bar n’est plus à faire et son histoire est incroyable. Giuseppe Cipriani, son créateur et son âme, est un homme passionné. Né en 1900, ce grand humaniste a beaucoup voyagé et a travaillé dans les plus grands hôtels d’Europe. Un soir, au bar de l’hôtel Europa où il est barman, il rencontre Harry Pickering, un jeune américain désabusé et fortuné, a qui il prête 10 000 lires. Ce dernier lui rendra la somme quelques mois plus tard, avec les intérêts! Avec ces 40 000 lires, Giuseppe fonde le Harry’s Bar. Une légende est née. Les plus grands artistes fréquenteront ce bar mythique: Charlie Chaplin, Orson Welles, Truman Capote, Georges Braque, Peggy Guggenheim… Le plus illustre buveur sera Ernest Hemingway, qui aura sa table attitrée pendant des années. C’est aussi au Harry’s bar que Giuseppe Cipriani a inventé ce célèbre cocktail: le Bellini, composé de Prosecco (un « champagne » italien), de purée de pêches blanches et d’un peu de sucre, le tout très frappé. grâce au succès de son bar à l’atmosphère unique, il a aussi ouvert le Cipriani restaurant et l’hôtel Cipriani.
Toutes les adresses recommandées par l’Hôtel Ca Maria Adele pour le Carnaval de Venise sont sur: hoostamagazine.com/partir-en-week-end/ca-maria-adele-bout...
Jouez & gagnez un dîner pour 2 à la Pizzetta Piu Grande à Paris Montmartre! www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=191679060850644
They get over a thousand tourists on a busy day. This was Fantasy Fest week in Key West and the crowds were heavy.
Not only do writers write more letters than most people, what they write tends to survive. Admiring readers, proud progeny, responsible literary executors, and even old enemies and jilted lovers all save writers' letters. Although the more passionate letters are sometimes suppressed out of a sense of decorum, even these letters sometimes manage to find their way into print. As a young man still in his teens, Ernest Hemingway loved and was jilted by Agnes von Kurowsky. A number of his biographers have argued that his bitter reaction to the end of what for Agnes was mostly a wartime fling scarred his relationships with women until the end of his life and directly colored the presentation of women and love in his fiction. The lovestruck letters between Hemingway and Kurowsky were first published in 1989, yet they recreate that ill-fated romance as if it happened yesterday: "I dreamed an awfully nice dream last night," Ag wrote to Hem on October 30, 1918. "I dreamed ... I spied you thru a lighted window shaving & fixing yourself all up in your best uniform. I was sitting on a bench outside waiting for you."
In another letter to Hemingway, Agnes openly discusses her nervousness about letters. "Writing has always made me draw into a shell - it seemed so irrevocable. Once written you can't take back what you have said." She was right, as the fate of her letters, seventy years later, suggests.
--- from the introduction, The Book of love: writers and their love letters, selected and introduced by Cathy N. Davidson, 1992
One of the 2nd floor doors leading from the porch to the upstairs hall. 3 handheld exposures merged and tonemapped with Photomatix Pro 4. Lightroom and Sharpener Pro treatments.
2600 x 2600 pixel image designed to work as wallpaper on most iOS devices.
Image source: www.pexels.com/photo/grand-central-station-hurry-blurred-...
Typeface: BW Mitga
... it's one of my favourite old books, a release from 1933.
"Winner take nothing" by Ernest Hemingway.
Winner take nothing... -as long as we aren't ALL Winners...
© All rights reserved .
The novel by the above title was written by Ernest Hemingway and was published in 1952. It is one of his most famous works. The story is about Santiago, an elderly fisherman and his battle with a large marlin.
This picture is a composit. The ocean scene is a sunrise taken at Emerald Isle; the old man is a wooden carving from a local park. Also, this is my 500th image posted to Flickr!
Cementerio ubicado en la casa de Ernest Hemingway, en La Habana, donde yacen los restos de cuatro de los perros del novelista, que además llegó a tener más de 60 gatos. En las lápidas se leen los nombres: Black, Negrita, Linda y Nerón.
Ernest Hemingway house, Key West, FL
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Blogged by College Fashion ("Vacation Inspiration: 4 Looks Inspired by Key West" by Ashley - Flagler College - August 8, 2010) at www.collegefashion.net/inspiration/vacation-inspiration-4...
Blogged by The Lit Witch: A Book Blog ("Flickr Book Photo of the Week" - September 15, 2011) at www.thelitwitch.com/?p=5148