View allAll Photos Tagged ErnestHemingway
2048 x 2048 pixel image for the iPad’s 2048 x 1536 pixel retina display.
Designed to complement the iPad iOS 7 & 8 lock screens, also works on an iPhone, just centre the image horizontally after selecting it.
Typefaces: Lettersmith, Woolen
For our Spring break this year we travelled south, right to the tip of the Keys to Key West.
These beginning scenes are from the beginning of the trip. Beautiful weather, beautiful scenery ... and never have I seen so many fishing boats anywhere. The Keys are sort of like the Caribbean, have that island mentality, yet still very much a part of America. Great restaurants and if you love seafood as we do, you'll be in heaven!
This was Hemingway's home from 1931 to 1939.It is a private, for-profit landmark and tourist attraction now populated by six and seven-toed cats that guides claim are descendants of Hemingway's cats. The author's second son, Patrick, who lived in the house, stated in a 1994 interview in the Miami Herald's "Tropic" that his father had peacocks in Key West, but no cats; he owned cats in Cuba. In a 1972 L.A. Times interview, Hemingway's widow Mary denounced the sale of "Hemingway cats" by the owners of the house as "An outright lie. Rank exploitation of Ernest's name." The house no longer sells cats, but does continue a selective breeding program for them.
It was in this house that he did some of his best work, including the final draft to "A Farewell to Arms," and the short story classics "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber."
The house stands at an elevation of 16 feet above sea level, but is still the second-highest site on the island. It was originally built by Asa Tift, a marine architect and salvage wrecker, in 1851 in colonial southern mansion style, out of limestone quarried from the site. As testament to its construction and location, it survived many hurricanes, and the deep basement remained, and remains, dry.
The Hemingways had lived in Key West since 1930, but had rented housing. Pauline Hemingway (the writer's second wife) found the Tift house in 1931, for sale at a tax auction. Pauline's uncle Gus bought it for her and Ernest, for $8,000 cash, and presented it to them as a wedding gift.
NO INVITES with BIG SPARKLY GRAPHICS. PLEASE, TRY TO RESPECT MY WISHES.
I prefer simple honest comments, rather then a copy & paste of an award code.
Many thanks!
This was Hemingway's home from 1931 to 1939.It is a private, for-profit landmark and tourist attraction now populated by six and seven-toed cats that guides claim are descendants of Hemingway's cats. The author's second son, Patrick, who lived in the house, stated in a 1994 interview in the Miami Herald's "Tropic" that his father had peacocks in Key West, but no cats; he owned cats in Cuba. In a 1972 L.A. Times interview, Hemingway's widow Mary denounced the sale of "Hemingway cats" by the owners of the house as "An outright lie. Rank exploitation of Ernest's name." The house no longer sells cats, but does continue a selective breeding program for them.
It was in this house that he did some of his best work, including the final draft to "A Farewell to Arms," and the short story classics "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber."
The house stands at an elevation of 16 feet above sea level, but is still the second-highest site on the island. It was originally built by Asa Tift, a marine architect and salvage wrecker, in 1851 in colonial southern mansion style, out of limestone quarried from the site. As testament to its construction and location, it survived many hurricanes, and the deep basement remained, and remains, dry.
One of the bathrooms upstairs in the Hemingway home.
The Hemingways had lived in Key West since 1930, but had rented housing. Pauline Hemingway (the writer's second wife) found the Tift house in 1931, for sale at a tax auction. Pauline's uncle Gus bought it for her and Ernest, for $8,000 cash, and presented it to them as a wedding gift.
NO INVITES with BIG SPARKLY GRAPHICS. PLEASE, TRY TO RESPECT MY WISHES.
I prefer simple honest comments, rather then a copy & paste of an award code.
Many thanks!
Hemingway house and gardens before wall or pool. Circa 1932-33. The Heritage House Collection, donated by the Campbell, Poirier and Pound families.
Key West Museum of Art & History
Key West, Florida
From a Woman’s Hand
Feature paintings, sculptures, photographs, drawings, prints, textiles, and ceramics created by female artists.
Hemingway House, seen from the side yard. The writer Ernest Hemingway lived here from 1931 to 1939. He owned the house for some time afterward, and often visited it. The house was built in 1851 by the ship salvager Asa Tift. Most of the landscaping was after Hemingway's time, after the U.S. Navy built a fresh water pipeline from the Florida mainland. This photo is geotagged.
Ernest Hemingway: Paris est une fête
( A moveable Feast)
Traduit par Marc Saporta
Gallimard - Paris, 1964
Ernest Hemingway's studio, where he worked, was over a detached carriage house. It contains a Royal portable typewriter which Hemingway used for writing, on the table. the studio was once connected with the main bedroom in the house by a walkway. This photo is geotagged.
MTP's home
- Croixelles (Heinrich Kreisel) / Das Anglitz ohne Gnade
- Betty Smith / Verwehte Träume
- Barbara Oberst / Nadine Vinet
- Ernest Hemingway / Wem die Stunde schlägt
- John Galsworthy / Jenseits
- Hildegard Plievier / Gelber Mond über der Steppe
- Klaus-Erich Boerner / Das unwandelbare Herz
- Frank Thiess / Caruso in Neapel
- William Somerset Maugham / Auf Messers Schneide
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Somerset_Maugham
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Thiess
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaus-Erich_Boerner
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hildegard_Piscator
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Galsworthy
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Hemingway
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Smith_(Schriftstellerin)
"The Good Lion" by Ernest Hemingway // Illustrated by Francesca Ivancich Scapinelli (San Francisco : Bradstreet Press, 1998 Santa Cruz : Foolscap Press) // #NYPLsafari #LibraryLove #SpecialCollections
"I’m not brave any more darling. I’m all broken. They’ve broken me."
Ernest Hemingway (A Farewell to Arms)
Secretary Kerry Tours Hemingway's Home Office in Cuba
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry listens as a guide describes work author Ernest Hemingway did in his trophy hunting-filled office at Finca Vigia - his home in San Francisco de Paula, Cuba - during a tour on August 14, 2015.
The famed American writer owned this house from 1940 until his death in 1960.
Photo credit: State Dept.
Salao è solo un pregiudizio, probabilmente questa barca non ha le vele rattoppate con i sacchi di farina e non torna sempre vuota, probabilmente non resterà sola ogni sera, con la sua solitudine, ad aspettarlo, tantomeno troverà l'aiuto di Manolo... Ma per noi resta il simbolo di una vittoria sulla sfortuna e il pregiudizio, di una tenacia fatta di sofferenze e passioni, una vita dedicata alla propria sussistenza, alla propria routine, con tutto quello che Santiago possiede, la barca le lenze e le reti, e i segni del suo mare, di quello che è sempre stata la sua unica vita e i suoi occhi..il suo unico scopo...uscire con la barca...la barca che lo rappresenta: se torna, torna con lui, se affonda, affonda con lui..Ma in ogni caso sarebbe felice, è questa la sua vera vittoria sul mondo..il suo orgoglio e la sua tenacia..Un rapporto unico, un'intera vita per il suo mare, per la sua necessità, per il suo orgoglio..
ispirato a "il vecchio e il mare" (Hemingway)
Finca La Vigía was Ernest Hemingway's house in Cuba.
—————
Like this picture ? Have a look at my Cuba collection for more.
Moe Inc., Larry Inc., and Curly Inc. Woowoowoowoowoooooo!
Read the whole post at
ivcaffeine.com/2010/05/17/the-real-reason-all-those-compa...
Ernest Hemingway's home Finca Vigia near Havana where he wrote Old Man And The Sea
No 191 b Hemingway's Hangouts, Havana- page 868, "1000 Places To See Before You Die" by Patricia Schultz.
Midnight in Paris - Alternative Movie Poster
Original illustration - posters, prints and many other products available at:
"The Bar Jamaica opened in 1911, immediately after Carlo Mainini got the licence for a wine shop. For many years the place did not had a name, but all the neighborhood would go there: from the gas station attendant to the moneybags, up to the little delinquent. Everybody used to smoke and, immersed in that fog, Giulio Confalonieri, a critic working for the 'Corriere della Sera', baptized it 'Jamaica', drawing inspiration from the movie 'Jamaica Inn' (1939) by Alfred Hitchcock. Its sign became one of the most popular in Italy. In the bar there was a unique climate that contributed to make Milan a capital of culture. It was the meeting point of intellectuals, artists, literary men and journalists such as Luciano Bianciardi, Mario Dondero, Giancarlo Fusco, Camilla Cederna, Piero Manzoni, Emilio Tadini, Gianni Dova, Cesare Peverelli, Lucio Fontana, Giuseppe Ungaretti, Salvatore Quasimodo, and later Allen Ginsberg, Dino Buzzati, Ernest Hemingway, Enrico Baj and Dario Fo."
Source: Milan Tourism
Statue of Ernest Hemingway in La Floridita
Note that you can actually see much better in the photo than in person because it is dark in there but the flash works magic.
Hemingway House with the wire fence. The Heritage House Collection, donated by the Campbell, Poirier and Pound families.
Cherished bedtime reading from times past -- and probably future, the next time I catch a bad cold. Story cupboard rocks!
Reus, marzo de 1938, la aviación italiana bombardea la ciudad, en la fotografía los daños en el interior del teatro.
Fotografías de Agustí Centelles i Ossó, fondo Centelles (c) 2012 Archivos estatales, MECyD, Centro Documental de la Memoria Histórica, todos los derechos reservados.
Ernest Hemingway en el campo de aviación de Reus
finally went to the well-known Closerie de Lilas on Montparnasse as it's quite close with bus line 83 I'm surprised we'd not been yet and it's a welcome place to go in the winter - quite warm in the piano bar where Hemingway used to drink Scotch, and eat oysters talking to Scott Fitzgerald, et al. Bar prices are a bit high but brasserie menu is reasonable. in the good weather we look forward to the terrace!