Monday, June 01, 2009

Two Hemingway Photos





These two photos of Ernest are new to me. They were brought to my attention by a writer friend and Hemingway fan, Joe Grant.
Joe's best guess is that they are publicity shots for "The Sun Also Rises." I believe that they were taken by Man Ray.
Here is some biographical information on Joe:
"My short stories have been published in 140 literary reviews and e-zines, such as Byline, New Authors Journal, Underground Voices, Nite-Writer's International Literary Arts Journal, Howling Moon Press, Hack Writers, New Online Review, Literary Tonic, six sentences, NexGenPulp, three UK literary reviews, Bottom of the World and Cupboard Gloom and three most recently in Darkest Before Dawn, strangeroad and a story in the anthology of horror, Northern Haunts, (available at Barnes & Noble, Target and on Amazon). I have been nominated for the Million Writers Award. I have won “Story of the Month” at Bartleby-Snopes Literary Review and Story of the Month at 6 Sentences. I have completed my first novel. I currently reside in Los Angeles. NOTE: Six stories of mine have been featured in 6S Volume 1, a collection of short stories by various writers available at Amazon and 6S Volume II out now. I have also been nominated for a South Stories Literary Award."
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Monday, May 04, 2009

Splash Award




I have been given a Splash award by Matthew at
  • Movietone News
  • . Thank you Matthew! Here are the rules copied from Matthew’s post:

    The Splash award is given to alluring, amusing, bewitching, impressive, and inspiring blogs. When you receive this award, you must:
    1. Put the logo on your blog/post.
    2. Nominate up to 9 blogs which allure, amuse, bewitch, impress or inspire you.
    3. Be sure to link to your nominees within your post.
    4. Let them know that they have been splashed by commenting on their blog.
    5. Remember to link to the person from whom you received your Splash award.

    So, here are a few blogs that I enjoy:
  • Paris Breakfasts

  • Paris Apartment

  • Not By A Long Shot! A photo Blog

  • Cafe Selavy

  • Torino Daily Photo
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    Monday, April 06, 2009

    Paris Poster Art



    Colorful vintage 1920's posters of Paris nightlife.
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    Sunday, February 22, 2009

    Roofs In Paris












    Paris Rooftops:
    "Night Symphony,"
    "Cats On A Roof In Paris," Edouard Boubat,
    "Roofs of Paris and Notre Dame," Vincent Van Gogh,
    "Paris Rooftops," Patricia Maguire,
    "Roofs of Paris In The Snow," Auguste Herbin, 1902,
    "Latin Quarter, 1926," photographer unknown,
    "Cats On Rooftops of Paris," artist unknown,
    "Overlooking the Roofs in Paris," 1886, by Vincent Van Gogh.
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    Saturday, January 31, 2009

    Jazz Age Poster Art





    Some more poster art for the blog.
    Hemingway's Jazz Age Paris.
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    Saturday, January 17, 2009

    The Hemingways In Schruns







    When the cold, damp, grey air of Winter hit Paris, the Hemingways would head to Switzerland or Austria for the dry cold air, the skiing, and a roaring fire in the lodge.
    These photos are from Schruns, Austria, taken in 1925. Ernest, Hadley, and Bumby.
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    Saturday, January 03, 2009

    Hemingway At The Select




    As regular visitors know, I have given quite a bit of space on the blog to Paris cafe life. Hemingway and the expat crowd used the cafes as places to work, socialize, and establish a sense of community.
    They also liked to drink, and after leaving Prohibition America they imbibed quite a bit in the cafes.
    The Select was one of Ernest's favorite haunts. He went there for breakfast and frequently stayed to write or just catch up on the gossip.
    Hemingway also put Jake Barnes and friends, from "The Sun Also Rises" at the Select.

    A present day American expat, Rick Tulka, and co-author Noel Riley Fitch have written a book called "Paris cafe: The Select Crowd."
    Rick has been generous enough to let me use the above illustration of Hem.
    For a change of pace, I'm adding a link to a Youtube clip , so you can see the present day Select and Rick at work. I think that it is very enjoyable and I hope that you do, too.
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    Tuesday, December 23, 2008

    Christmas Color From Paris




    Merry Christmas to all of Hem's fans!
    "Evening in Paris" by Liza Hirst.
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    Saturday, December 06, 2008

    Vintage 1920's Paris






    The top photos and paintings are of Montmartre in 1925, typical street scenes of Paris in the '20s: A narrow street in Montmartre, The Moulin Rouge, and a Montmartre street scene painted by Utrillo. Next, a photo of 1920s Paris, an uphill shot so typical of Montmartre.
    Then, "The Old Book Man" looking for a bargain perhaps at the bookstalls on the banks of the Seine, where Hemingway shopped.
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    Monday, November 24, 2008

    Hemingway As Kid Balzac



    This satirical painting of Hemingway was done by his good friend and fishing companion, Waldo Peirce.
    A critic had remarked that Hemingway looked like 19th century French writer Honore de Balzac.
    In Peirce's painting, Hemingway appeared to be a slimmed-down version of Balzac (at least facially).
    Hemingway was always comparing himself to famous writers and he probably enjoyed this - even though it was done in jest.
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    Monday, November 10, 2008

    Boxing In Paris


    Cirque d' Hiver



    Hemingway loved to box, it was part of his essence, essential to the core of his personality. (That is Hem in the top photo.)
    He was a good amateur boxer, even if he embellished his prowess, as he did with most things masculine.
    In the preface to "A Movable Feast", Hemingway tells about the boxing at the Stade Anastasie, and the "great twenty-round fights at the Cirque d' Hiver." He was fond of most sports and outdoor activity, but boxing was one of the things - like bullfighting, that was at the top of the list.
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    Monday, November 03, 2008

    Harry's New York Bar


    Harry's New York Bar, 5 rue Daunou (sank roo doe noe, to the Yanks), was a popular hangout for American expats, including Hemingway. Ernest would often spar at a nearby gym with Harry holding Hemingway's towel.
    It was particularly popular for those fleeing prohibition America. Harrys inventions included: The White Lady, 1919, The Bloody Mary, 1921, and the Harry's Pick Me Up, in 1923.
    In 1924, Harry's started its first presidential straw poll for the American expats.
    That year, Republican Calvin Coolidge beat Democrat John W. Davis.
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    Thursday, October 30, 2008

    Eugene Atget's Paris In The 1920's

    Paris Street Scene


    Prostitute, Paris




    Cafe, Paris, 1924 6AM




    Eugene Atget (1857-1927) was one of the most artistic photographers of Paris in the early years of the 1900's. He was also a skilled technician of the craft.
    He was orphaned when he was seven years old and went to sea as a cabin boy on the Transatlantic. He gave up the sea after several voyages across the Atlantic and became an actor, where he performed in mostly second-rate shows in secondary roles.
    He knew that he could make a living with a camera selling scenes to artists who needed a fixed image to study as they painted. He sold his work to the artists of Montparnasse.
    He was a bohemian at heart and he moved to Montparnasse to live in the "art colony" there. He was a neighbor of Man Ray, and a contemporary of Matisse, and Picasso.
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    Sunday, August 10, 2008

    Some More Cafe Life




    The sidewalk cafes of Paris and the circle of friends that Hemingway met there is a central theme to "A Moveable Feast."
    He did much of his most productive writing sitting in a cafe with his blue notebooks and a few pencils and a pocket knife to keep them sharp. The walk from his apartment or just a stroll through Paris to the cafe were stimulants for a good day's work.
    His first published short stories were written that way and his beginning of "The Sun Also Rises" started there, too.
    The painting is called "Hemingway's Paris," and is courtesy of Maranda Pleasant of Big Modern Art.
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    Saturday, July 26, 2008

    F.Scott Fitzgerald












    F. Scott Fitzgerald was perhaps the most famous of the Jazz Age writers, (he supposedly coined the phrase himself). F. Scott Fitzgerald embodied the spirit of the Roaring Twenties. He staked his claim as the voice of his generation with his first novel, "This Side of Paradise" (1920), and later with "The Great Gatsby" (1925). The Saint Paul, Minnesota native spent a lot of time visiting Paris in the 1920's with his wife Zelda, and their daughter Scottie. Fitzgerald was a fan of Hemingway's early work and Hemingway loved "The Great Gatsby." Fitzgerald was to become a good friend (if a difficult one) of Hem's and the two had quite a few interesting and humorous moments in France. Fitzgerald would also help Hemingway in getting his writing published. Hemingway devoted quite a bit of space in "A Moveable Feast" to Fitzgerald, their time together, and Hemingway's not too flattering opinion of Zelda's influence on Fitzgerald's career.
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    Sunday, July 13, 2008

    Bicycle Racing At The Velodrome








    After Ernest gave up horseracing, he discovered cycling and liked it more than betting on the horses.
    A friend of his, Mike Ward, told him that he used to bet on the horses but he'd found something better, bicycle racing.
    In "A Moveable Feast" Ernest wrote: "I have started many stories about bicycle racing but have never written one that is as good as the races are both on the indoor tracks and on the roads."
    " French is the only language it has ever been written in properly and the terms are all French and that is what makes it hard to write. Mike was right about it, there is no need to bet. But that comes at another time in Paris."
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    Monday, July 07, 2008

    Running Of The Bulls







    This week it is the "running of the bulls" in Pamplona, Northern Spain, at the Festival of San Fermin. Young men have been participating in this ceremony since the 1600's, but Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises" published in 1926, made it the event that it is today.
    Gertrude Stein recommended to Hemingway that he take a vacation there to help him "clear his head" and concentrate on the business of writing a novel.
    These photos are from 1925, one year before he finished his novel.
    Top photo: Hemingway on the left, Harold Loeb, Lady Duff Twysden, Hadley, Don Stewart and Pat Guthrie.
    (If you click on the bottom photo, you will see Ernest just in front of the bull as he participates in "the amateurs.")
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