View allAll Photos Tagged ErnestHemingway
39 rue Descartes, on the top floor of which Hemingway rented a room to write in. He took twigs and bundles of wood to make a fire on cold winter days.
Brooks mit den restlichen Teilen von Hemingways Selbstmordwaffe in der Bar "Outlaws and Angels" in Bliss, Idaho
The Hemingway-Pfeiffer House, also known as the Pfeiffer-Janes House and Carriage House, is a 1910 Colonial Revival structure located at North 10th Avenue and West Cherry Street. It is where novelist Ernest Hemingway wrote portions of his novel, A Farewell to Arms. Hemingway was married to Pauline Pfeiffer, the daughter of the owners of the house, Paul and Mary Pfeiffer, from 1927 to 1940. The structure was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The house is now the home of Arkansas State University's Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center.
Piggott, Arkansas is located near the northeastern corner of the state in eastern Clay County. It serves as one of two county seats to the county, the other being Corning.
This was Hemingway's office and the curved desk was one he designed himself and had made especially for him. Below the surface of the desk you can see the back of a matching couch he had made at the same time. Apparently the movie star Gary Cooper when visiting generally slept on that couch as he was very tall and the beds were not long enough.
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.
The house's first owner, Asa Tift, had this raised flowerbed and pond built in the shape of an ironclad from the American Civil War.
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".
Cubetti di pesce spada, marinati in soia e miele, vengono serviti su una crema di friggitelli e sedano rapa; ananas cotto sotto vuoto a bassa temperatura con succo d’arancia e anice stellato; completano il piatto friggitelli e daikon crudi a filo.
di Moreno Cedroni
Hotel Maisonnave
Encierros de San Fermín 2017 聖費爾明節奔牛
Running of the Bulls 奔牛節
Pamplona, Iruña, Spain.
西班牙潘普洛納
Panel discussion from Robert Frost, Ayn Rand, and Ernest Hemingway scholars in relation to Tobias Wolff's book 'Old School'. Park University, Parkville, MO. 04.23.09
The Hemingway polydactyl cats are so interesting. Very personable, guess because they are around so many people. This was about the best pic I could get with my daughter's "point and shoot" that showed the front paws the best. This little guy is waiting for the man in the ticket booth to give him/her a snack; that's the only reason cats hang around you anyway, isn't it?
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.
La Bodeguita del Medio is a typical restaurant-bar of Havana (Cuba). It is a famous tourist destination because of the personalities which have patronized it: Salvador Allende, the poet Pablo Neruda, the artist Josignacio and many others. La Bodeguita lays claim to being the birthplace of the Mojito cocktail, prepared in the bar since its opening in 1942, although this is disputed. The rooms are full of curious objects, frames, photos, as well as the walls covered by signatures of famous or unknown customers, recounting the island's past.
tourists and locals continue to go to La Bodeguita del Medio to drink the authentic Cuban mojito
The Cours Mirabeau is a wide thoroughfare, planted with double rows of plane-trees, bordered by fine houses and decorated by fountains. It follows the line of the old city wall and divides the town into two sections. The new town extends to the south and west; the old town, with its narrow, irregular streets and its old mansions dating from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, lies to the north. Along this avenue, which is lined on one side with banks and on the other with cafés, is the Deux Garçons, the most famous brasserie in Aix. Built in 1792, it has been frequented by the likes of Paul Cézanne, Émile Zola and Ernest Hemingway.
This is my classmate Mårten portraying Ernest Hemingway from Yousuf Karsh's portrait of the famous(and awesome) writer. Mårten is also an aspiring writer, so I found it a fitting tribute to the late great writer.
This is the portrait in question: karsh.org/#/the_work/portraits/ernest_hemingway/
Hotel Belle Vue d'Angleterre (you'll need a very good telescope to see England from here - on the Med)
The hotel where Ernest Hemingway spent his honeymoon !
A lamp(?) in the bathroom.
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".
A view of the dining room fireplace -- and several portraits of Ernest Hemingway -- inside the Hemingway Home and Museum on Key West.
While this might look like a bedroom it was in fact the room where Hemingway did most of the writing while he was living in Cuba. That is an original air conditioning unit and the books and furniture are all original. He did his typing standing up at his little typewriter which was still on a shelf to the right of the bed. He used the bed to spread out his pages and collate them and to spread his newspapers while skimming through them.
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.