Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899 – 1961) was
raised in Oak Park, Illinois in a conservative family atmosphere. After high
school he reported for a few months for The Kansas City Star.
In 1918, Hemingway went overseas to serve
in World War I as an ambulance driver in the Italian Army. For his service, he
was awarded the Italian Silver Medal of Bravery, but soon sustained injuries
that landed him in a hospital in Milan. There he met a nurse named Agnes von
Kurowsky, who soon accepted his proposal of marriage, but later left him for
another man. This devastated the young writer but provided fodder for his works
"A Very Short Story" and, more famously, A Farewell to Arms.
Still nursing his injury and recovering
from the brutalities of war at the young age of 20, he returned to the United
States and spent time in northern Michigan before taking a job at the Toronto
Star. It was in Chicago that Hemingway met Hadley Richardson, the woman who
would become his first wife. The couple married and quickly moved to Paris,
where Hemingway worked as a foreign correspondent for the Star.
In Paris, Hemingway soon became a key part
of what Gertrude Stein would famously call "The Lost Generation."
With Stein as his mentor, Hemingway made the acquaintance of many of the great
writers and artists of his generation, such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound,
Pablo Picasso and James Joyce. In 1923, Hemingway and Hadley had a son, John
Hadley Nicanor Hemingway. By this time the writer had also begun frequenting
the famous Festival of San Fermin in Pamplona, Spain.
In 1925, the couple, joining a group of
British and American expatriates, took a trip to the festival that would later
provided the basis of Hemingway's first novel, The Sun Also Rises. The novel is
widely considered Hemingway's greatest work, artfully examining the postwar
disillusionment of his generation.
Soon after the publication of The Sun Also
Rises, Hemingway and Hadley divorced, due in part to his affair with a woman
named Pauline Pfeiffer, who would become Hemingway's second wife shortly after
his divorce from Hadley was finalized. The author continued to work on his book
of short stories, Men Without Women.
Soon, Pauline became pregnant and the
couple decided to move back to America. After the birth of their son Patrick
Hemingway in 1928, they settled in Key West, Florida, but summered in Wyoming.
During this time, Hemingway finished his celebrated World War I novel A
Farewell to Arms, securing his lasting place in the literary canon.
When he wasn't writing, Hemingway spent
much of the 1930s chasing adventure: big-game hunting in Africa, bullfighting
in Spain, deep-sea fishing in Florida. While reporting on the Spanish Civil War
in 1937, Hemingway met a fellow war correspondent named Martha Gellhorn and
gathered material for his next novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls, which would
eventually be nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.
Almost predictably, his marriage to Pauline
Pfeiffer deteriorated and the couple divorced. Gellhorn and Hemingway married
soon after and purchased a farm near Havana, Cuba, which would serve as their
winter residence.
When the United States entered World War II
in 1941, Hemingway served as a correspondent and was present at several of the
war's key moments, including the D-Day landing. Toward the end of the war,
Hemingway met another war correspondent, Mary Welsh, whom he would later marry
after divorcing Martha Gellhorn. In 1951, Hemingway wrote The Old Man and the
Sea, which would become perhaps his most famous book, finally winning him the
Pulitzer Prize he had long been denied.
The author continued his forays into Africa
and sustained several injuries during his adventures, even surviving multiple
plane crashes.
In 1954, he won the Nobel Prize in
Literature. Even at this peak of his literary career, though, the burly
Hemingway's body and mind were beginning to betray him. Recovering from various
old injuries in Cuba, Hemingway suffered from depression and was treated for
numerous conditions such as high blood pressure and liver disease.
He wrote A Moveable
Feast, a memoir of his years in Paris, and retired permanently to Idaho. There
he continued to battle with deteriorating mental and physical health.Early on
the morning of July 2, 1961, Ernest Hemingway committed suicide in his Ketchum
home.
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