View allAll Photos Tagged ErnestHemingway
Hemingway on board the attack transport Dorothea L. Dix on the way to observe the assault on Omaha Beach on 6 June 1944.
See View 1 - www.flickr.com/photos/binocwpg/7027520571/in/photostream - for notes about this binocular and a photograph of it as it is today.
Any further information readers could provide about Hemingway's use of this type binocular in particular photographs of him with one or quotes from his works would be most welcome.
Der Haupteingang befindet sich an der Südseite und führt in einen ca. 4 Quadratmeter großen Flur, in dem sich Hemingway erschoss
Ilustración realizada en el Jardín Botánico de Medellín Joaquín Antonio Uribe
"He hears the silence so loud" JH
Photos underglass from the Dangerous Summer grace Hemingway's Desk...EH spent little time here...this was Mary's bedroom and her domain, after he died she wrote her book 'How It Was' here starting in summer of '67 on her portable Royal typewriter she shared with Ernest.
Closerie des Lilas, where Hemingway used to come and write in the 1920s. Also a favourite haunt of Cézanne, Zola, Baudelaire, Verlaine, Lenin and Apollinaire. Also Wilde, Man Ray, F Scott Fitzgerald, Breton, Gide, Pound, Picasso, Beckett, Modigliani and Sartre.
Heminway's favorite hunting boots sit at the foot of the bed in his Ketchum home. The sandals were rescued from the Finca, he spent many hours wearing the cuban-made sandals on the Pilar.
Couverture d'un vieil exemplaire du Magazine "Lectures d'aujourd'hui" des années 1950
Légende du cinéma américain avec une filmographie impressionnante Gary Cooper (1901-1961) a conquit le monde entier de par sa stature athlétique, son charisme et sa probité.
Il a été le héro parfait des films d'aventures, en particulier, dans le rôle du shérif, dans Le train sifflera trois fois, L'adieu aux armes, Pour qui sonne le glas tirés des meilleurs romans d'Ernest Hemingway, qui sera son ami jusqu'à sa mort en 1961.
Elizabeth Drake, Drake Interiors Ltd designed the theme with the hidden courtyard garden. Hemingway lived next door for a time with his wife after their honeymoon.
While in Paris he wrote "The Sun also Rises"
1235 North Dearborn Parkway, Chicago IL
Elizabeth Drake, Drake Interiors Ltd designed the theme with the hidden courtyard garden. Hemingway lived next door for a time with his wife after their honeymoon.
While in Paris he wrote "The Sun also Rises"
1235 North Dearborn Parkway, Chicago IL
This is the library of Ernest Hemingway's house in Havana, Cuba. I was never a great fan of Hemingway though I found some of his books really interesting as a young man. He had a great collection of books around the place and was clearly a prolific reader. The House was really lovely, a really homely place that you could easily imagine as a place you might want to live!
The following is on the website:
For more than two decades, famed author Ernest Hemingway occupied Finca Vigia, a hilltop villa 20 kilometers east of Havana. Built in 1886 by the Catalan architect Miguel Pascual y Baguer, the house was acquired in 1939 by Hemingway, who lived there until 1960.
Elizabeth Drake, Drake Interiors Ltd designed the theme with the hidden courtyard garden. Hemingway lived next door for a time with his wife after their honeymoon.
While in Paris he wrote "The Sun also Rises"
1235 North Dearborn Parkway, Chicago IL
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.
But a man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated.
Ernest Hemingway, from The Old Man and the Sea.
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Not an hdr.
Courtesy of a mutated predecessor, quite a few of Hemingway's cats are polydactyl (many-toed). The original cat was a gift to Hemingway from a friend of his - she bred, and those litters bred. The Hemingway house aims to hold about sixty, with the numbers controlled through spaying.
The house was built by Asa Tift, a marine architect (and Confederate mariner), in 1851. In 1931 Hemingway purchased it and lived here with his second wife, Pauline, and their two sons until 1939.
Here, Hemingway completed the final draft of "A Farewell to Arms," as well as "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber".
The Hollywood connection: Hemingway used Key West as a setting for his classic novel, “To Have and Have Not.” The main character of the novel, Harry Morgan was based on the rumrunners and smugglers Hemingway encountered in Key West saloons like Sloppy Joe’s. The novel was made into a classic movie in 1944 starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. (Above) The setting was moved from Key West to a fictitious Caribbean island.
Elizabeth Drake, Drake Interiors Ltd designed the theme with the hidden courtyard garden. Hemingway lived next door for a time with his wife after their honeymoon.
While in Paris he wrote "The Sun also Rises"
1235 North Dearborn Parkway, Chicago IL
The Brasserie Lipp was opened in 1880 by Léonard Lipp and his wife Pétronille.
In July 1920, Marcellin Cazes redesigned the brasserie, which had become frequented by poets such as Paul Verlaine and Guillaume Apollinaire. In 1935, he established the Prix Cazes, a literary prize awarded each year to an author who has won no other literary prize.
It's perhaps best known for its association with Ernest Hemingway, who wrote about his meals of bread with olive oil, potato salad and large beers in "A Moveable Feast."
The brasserie is currently owned by Groupe Bertrand of Auvergne, who also owns Angelina tea house on the Rue de Rivoli. (I've an idea I read somewhere that JK Rowling stops at Angelina's when she's in Paris for one of their outstanding hot chocolates).