Contents:
Preview — Dateline Toronto by Ernest Hemingway. Paperback , pages.
Published December 31st by Scribner Book Company first published To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about Dateline Toronto , please sign up. Lists with This Book.
Dateline: Toronto: The Complete Toronto Star Dispatches, [Ernest Hemingway, William White] on www.farmersmarketmusic.com *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Editorial Reviews. About the Author. Ernest Hemingway did more to influence the style of Dateline: Toronto: The Complete Toronto Star Dispatches, - Kindle edition by Ernest Hemingway. Download it once and read it on your.
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In December , Hemingway's career changed forever when he went to Europe with his wife and as a foreign correspondent wrote human-interest stories about post-war conditions.
Here he made his first experience of bullfighting, the sport that came to be so important in his writings. After much success as a foreign correspondent, Hemingway returned to Toronto in But upon his return, Hemingway had a bitter falling out with his editor, Harry Hindmarsh, who believed Hemingway had been spoiled by his time overseas.
Even his resignation was ignored, and Hemingway continued to write sporadically through Toronto contains articles that Hemingway wrote for the Star. At the time of the collection's publication, in , it was believed to contain the complete works of Ernest Hemingway for the Star. Determining which stories Hemingway wrote, however, was not a straightforward task.
In the s, it was common for newspaper stories to run without crediting the author. Of the stories in the collection, only were bylined Ernest M. Hemingway Hemingway did not stop using his middle initial until later in his career.
In the s, it was common for newspaper stories to run without crediting the author. Used book in very good condition. Find a copy in the library Finding libraries that hold this item At the time of the collection's publication, in , it was believed to contain the complete works of Ernest Hemingway for the Star. Please choose whether or not you want other users to be able to see on your profile that this library is a favorite of yours.
The rest of the stories had either no byline, or occasionally pseudonyms if Hemingway already had one story in the paper. In researching Hemingway's career for the Centennial of the Toronto Star , reporter William Burrill uncovered evidence of 30 additional stories that Hemingway had written for the Toronto Star , but had been either missed by earlier researchers, published without Hemingway's bylines, or published under such bylines as "Peter Jackson" or "John Hadley", which were known Hemingway pseudonyms already identified in White's collection [6] [7] When Hemingway had returned from Europe, his editor possibly punished him by refusing to allow him bylines, but many of the stories identified by Burrill had evidence pointing to Hemingway's authorship.
Most of these additional "lost" stories can be found in William Burrill's book "Hemingway, The Toronto Years" a page award-winning biography that also fully reprints 25 of the "lost" Hemingway stories in Burrill's page Appendix. Furthermore, Burrill points out that the Toronto Star archives only maintained copies of the final edition of the newspaper; Hemingway may have written stories that fell out of the final edition and as such his complete works for the Toronto Star may never be known. Many of the stylistic techniques and themes that would characterize Hemingway's writing were first put to use for the Star.
But if you land a big tuna after a six-hour fight, fight him man against fish until your muscles are nauseated with the unceasing strain, and finally bring him up alongside the boat, green-blue and silver in the lazy ocean, you will be purified and will be able to enter unabashed into the presence of the very elder gods and they will make you welcome.