View allAll Photos Tagged ErnestHemingway
Austrian Airlines - Boeing 777-2Z9ER - OE-LPB (c/n 28699/163) - Heart of Europe
Formerly flew for Lauda Air under the same registration as "Ernest Hemingway".
"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
Promoting The Big Read at the River Forest Memorial Day Parade 2007 are Virginia Cassin, WWI Red Cross nurse Agnes (Laura Lynch), young Ernest Hemingway (Aaron Mrozik) and Beth Robinson.
This was Hemingway and his wife Hadley’s first Paris apartment, up on the third floor. It had cold water and a squat toilet on the landing, the contents of which were pumped into a horse-drawn tank wagon each night.
Finca La Vigía was Ernest Hemingway's house in Cuba.
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Like this picture ? Have a look at my Cuba collection for more.
Hemingway's retreat, Finca Vigia, is exactly as he left it in 1960 because he had planned on returning from his trip back to the United States.
The Church of Our Lady of Victory :
growth of the city was such that the old church San Rafeu could hardly more welcoming new citizens. Abbot Bernard, pastor from 1882 to 1890, when entrusted the construction of a new church by the architect Pierre Aublé, classmate Felix Martin. On Lyonnaise origin and avid Byzantine style - Moorish Pierre Aublé imagined the Basilica of Saint Raphael with this inspiration. Moreover, we find a characteristic of this type of dome buildings, largely inspired by the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. We also discover the front a representation of the Archangel Raphael, symbol of the town (see "The Legend of Tobias"). Built largely of red sandstone with Esterel, it occupies a total area of ââ850 m² and a height of 35m.
The Notre Dame was inaugurated in 1887 and named in honor of a famous sea battle where Christian forces routed the Ottoman fleet on October 5, 1571. Vatican was raised to the dignity of Basilica in 2004 the second account that now the diocese of Fréjus-Toulon with Saint-Maximin.
Picked this up for two bucks at a garage sale.
Just the thing to display my old Eugene Loeber antique camera.
The swimming pool is 65 feet long and 9 feet deep at one end.
It was built during the winter of 1937-38 and cost $20,000.00.
Playing with the colours and the angles.
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".
And here is my plate.
"Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut." - Ernest Hemingway
He knew what he was talking about.
"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
The swimming pool is 65 feet long and 9 feet deep at one end.
It was built during the winter of 1937-38 and cost $20,000.00.
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".
West 4th Street, NYC
by navema
There has been a book shop at this location since 1992, when Arthur Farrier opened Bookleaves. In the early nineties there were a number of used and rare book shops in Greenwich Village, but by 2005 Arthur Farrier's shop was one of only a few in the Village, and the only one left in the West Village. Kim Herzinger bought the shop in early 2005 and made a few important changes, while at the same time attempting to retain something of the atmosphere of Bookleaves, as well as maintaining some of the strengths of the earlier shop--photography, art, and film. Herzinger's major interest is literature, however, and the central focus of the shop is on literary first editions, with a particularly strong selection of signed first editions; British writers; the English-language literature of the Caribbean, Africa, India, Canada, and other Commonwealth countries; as well as a burgeoning collection of literature in translation.
Herzinger was a professor of English for over 25 years, and is more than happy to discuss books with you. And Arthur Farrier has, happily, stayed on at Left Bank Books. After all, he's now officially a Greenwich Village institution.
His is the full-length marker under the trees. Visitors left bottles, glasses, and a nice pen. The marker is covered with pennies.
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".