圖書標籤:
发表于2024-12-29
Hunting with Hemingway pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載 2024
Fifteen years after her father's death, Hilary Hemingway received her curious inheritance. It was an audiocassette filled with the voice of her father telling outrageous stories about his hunting expeditions with his famous older brother, Ernest Hemingway. In this mesmerizing book, Hilary transcribes these stories, revealing the bond between two larger-than-life brothers-and tells of her own quest to make peace with the painful parts of the Hemingway legacy.
The Hemingway legacy lives on in this "delightful, endearing" ("News Press") look at the legends and memories of Ernest Hemingway and his family. Published to coincide with Hemingway's 102nd birthday, July 21.
Hilary Hemingway's father, Leicester Hemingway, committed suicide in 1982, 21 years after his famous older brother, Ernest. In 1997, Hilary's mother died and left her a mysterious audiocassette of Leicester telling hunting stories at the family home in Miami Beach. Are the stories true? Interjections by Leicester's wife and a good friend suggest they are well-polished yarns, designed to deflect Ernest idolaters like the unnamed English professor whose nervous laugh and awkward questions punctuate the recording. Does it matter if they're true? "These stories are really good," says Hilary's 7-year-old daughter. "I even like them and I really hate hunting." Indeed, Leicester's suspenseful tales of stalking crocodiles, ostriches, and tigers with his adored big brother evoke the glamorous Hemingway world of men pitted against beasts as a test of courage and grace under pressure. Listening to the recording on her daughter's purple Barney tape player, the author rediscovers "the big, laughing man" who taught her "to enjoy whatever life might throw at me"; she then comes to terms with his suicide in the face of a debilitating illness. Skillfully interweaving her father's voice with her own reflections in her meditative text, the author reminds us that the Hemingway legacy is not just one of swaggering machismo, but of love for family and pleasure in the physical world.
--Wendy Smith
This is a disappointing narrative based on audiotaped accounts left by Hemingway's younger brother Leicester (himself a writer overshadowed by Ernest) and revealed here by Leicester's daughter. These tales, ostensibly related by Leicester to an anonymous professor researching the Hemingway mystique, are said to be ones "Papa never made public." The death-defying feats by Leicester and Ernest in Africa include escaping from a pack of man-eating wild dogs, killing a cobra that hovers inches from Leicester's head, even planting explosives on Nazi U-boats. Through listening to these tapes, an epiphany comes to Hilary about her father, who, like Ernest and his father before him, committed suicide: "Dad's stories are all that's important.... The stories are for you, for me, for everyone, to know my Dad as he really was, a man who had the courage to love life." Never before able to forgive his suicide, Hilary "for the first time... could mourn my father." The entire work seems apocryphal, which is forgivable; and the adventure stories themselves, while predictably misogynist, are relatively absorbing, but two factors ruin the integrity of this work. First is the mocking portrayal of the literature professor on the tape: he seems to have no manners, no real life experience and ridiculously symbolic interpretations of Hemingway stories. The stereotype is overdone to the point that few readers will sympathize with Hilary's father, a man who is hostile to even the most basic questions about himself and his brother. Second, while some of the information documented is important for anyone wishing to learn more about Hemingway's family, Hilary's frame narrative about her discovery of the tapes is so insipidly written that it reads like a work of young adult fiction. (July)
This book permanently settles the debate of whether or not artistic talent is genetic. Clearly it!s not. Hilary, niece of you-know-who, here offers a cache of unknown hunting adventures of her celebrated uncle and his kid brother (her father), Leicester, which she claims were bequeathed to her on an audio tape of her dad relating them to an anonymous professor?a badly clichEd milquetoast scholar (could this be any more of a phony set-up?). While Ernest plays a large role, Leicester, a.k.a. ?the Baron,? is the central figure. Besides writing and suicide, rudeness must also be a Hemingway brothers! trait, as Leicester emerges as boorish and overbearing. Though the author!s note suggests that these tales should be taken in a ?spirit of playfulness,? most are so over the top that they should be regarded as fiction, especially since at the book!s climax the author dumps the supposed tape into the ocean, conveniently eliminating the evidence. Though one can sympathize with Hilary!s making peace with her father!s suicide after hearing his stories, this volume seems little more than another Hemingway cashing in on the name. Not recommended.
-Michael Rogers, Library Journal
Authors who read their own books bring an emotional closeness to their stories, which could never be created by an actor or the printed word. In writing about her father, Leicester Hemingway (the brother of Ernest), daughter Hilary uses the device of posthumously listening to an audiotape made of him telling stories. In addition to the exciting tales on the tape, Hilary's own commentary reveals the sensitive scars left by her father's and uncle's suicides, referred to as the "family exit." Husband Jeffry (and co-author) provides a contrasting male tone to an insightful and personal audio experience. J.A.H.
Hilary Hemingway is an award-winning screenwriter and a writer for The Miami Herald, Interview, and Harper's Bazaar. She produces evening news for FOX Television and serves as the Executive Director of the International Hemingway Festival.
length: (cm)18.9 width:(cm)13.5
評分
評分
評分
評分
Hunting with Hemingway pdf epub mobi txt 電子書 下載 2024