Abstract

Current Bibliography Alyssa C. Adkins, Maureen Harrington, Annemarie Thompson, and Carolyn Wadle [The current bibliography aspires to include all serious contributions to Hemingway scholarship. Given the substantial quantity of significant critical work appearing on Hemingway’s life and writings annually, inconsequential items from the popular press have been omitted to facilitate the distinction of important developments and trends in the field. Annotations for articles appearing in The Hemingway Review have been omitted due to the immediate availability of abstracts introducing each issue. Kelli Larson welcomes your assistance in keeping this feature current. Please send reprints, clippings, and photocopies of articles, as well as notices of new books, directly to Larson at the University of St. Thomas, 333 JRC, 2115 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55105-1096. E-Mail: KaLarson1@stthomas.edu.] Alyssa C. Adkins, Maureen Harrington, Annemarie Thompson, and Carolyn Wadle University of St. Thomas Books Spanier, Sandra, Albert J. DeFazio III, and Robert W. Trogdon, eds. The Letters of Ernest Hemingway Volume 2, 1923–1925. New York: Cambridge UP, 2013. [Including all known surviving letters from EH’s early Paris years, this is the second volume of an estimated seventeen-volume series of Hemingway’s correspondence. On a personal level, the letters show EH’s devotion to wife Hadley and son Bumby, growing passion for Spain, and blossoming friendship with Pauline Pfeiffer. Professionally, they document his transformative relationships with Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein and others of the Lost Generation, his stylistic and creative development including the publication of IOT and the writing of SAR, and his involvement with the influential little magazines of the period. Helpful endnotes follow each of the 242 letters, identifying references to people, places, and events. Includes useful introductory materials such as a detailed chronology of the covered years and maps. Extensive index.] [End Page 165] Google Scholar Essays Anderson, David L. “Analogues of the Deserter-in-the-Gauertal Incident: Philoxenia in ‘The Snows of Kilimanjaro.’” The Hemingway Review 33.1 (Fall 2013): 15–26. Google Scholar Armstrong, Richard. “The State of Things in Cuba: A Letter to Hemingway.” Introduction by Larry Grimes. In Hemingway, Cuba, and the Cuban Works. Eds. Larry Grimes and Bickford Sylvester. Kent, OH: Kent State UP, 2013. 75–83. [Reprints 1936 letter to EH from journalist Richard Armstrong in response to EH’s request for information on recent revolutionary activities as background for THHN. Armstrong discusses the status of the Communist party, reports terroristic killings, and describes the exile and death of automotive engineer Octavio Seigle. Grimes’s introduction details EH’s relationship with Armstrong and his use of Armstrong’s materials in his novel.] Google Scholar Arnaiz, Ned Quevedo. “Hemingway: His Impact in the Cuban Press Today.” In Hemingway, Cuba, and the Cuban Works. Eds. Larry Grimes and Bickford Sylvester. Kent, OH: Kent State UP, 2013. 327–354. [Annotated bibliography of Cuban publications on EH’s life in Cuba and Cuban works from 1970 through 2013. Closes with a list of Cuban conferences on EH beginning in 1986.] Google Scholar Avlon, John, Jesse Angelo and Errol Louis, eds. Deadline Artists: America’s Greatest Newspaper Columns. New York: Overlook P, 2012. 20–22, 215–216. [Reprints two of EH’s newspaper columns: “The Chauffeurs of Madrid” for the North American Newspaper Alliance (1937) and “Chicago Gang War” for The Toronto Star (1921).] Google Scholar Bain, Grant. “Fat Words, Fat Souls: Momaday, Hemingway, and the Nature of Truth.” CEA Critic 75.3 (November 2013): 303–309. [Draws on Julia Kristeva’s theories of language to read N. Scott Momaday’s House Made of Dawn as a response to the thematic interplay of truth and language found in “The Snows of Kiliamanjaro.” Bain contends that both works express the written word’s potential for conveying and corrupting truth; however, in EH’s story language exists largely to hide truth while in Momaday’s novel the word exists as truth, and is thus capable of generating truth.] Google Scholar Belknap, Tim. “Who Was Fatty Pearson?” Air & Space Smithsonian 27.5 (October/November 2012): 62–67. [Profiles the life of pilot Alexander Cuninghame “Fatty” Pearson. Belknap recounts Pearson’s stint as an African bush pilot, his time as a commander of a WW II...

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