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Ernest Hemingway - Blog Posts

13 years ago

Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

Ernest Hemingway (via scribnerbooks)


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8 years ago
Peaceful Place We Stayed Over That Was A Hundred Kilometers Away From The City. 📚✨
Peaceful Place We Stayed Over That Was A Hundred Kilometers Away From The City. 📚✨
Peaceful Place We Stayed Over That Was A Hundred Kilometers Away From The City. 📚✨

Peaceful place we stayed over that was a hundred kilometers away from the city. 📚✨


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6 months ago
The Time When Orson Welles Met Ernest Hemingway For The First Time Back In 1937

The time when Orson Welles met Ernest Hemingway for the first time back in 1937


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3 years ago
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….
A Couple Confessions From Your Favorite Romantic Chemistry Academic….

A couple confessions from your favorite romantic Chemistry academic….

Is there anything more Dark Academia than Nietzche and Schnabel commenting on Mozart’s music?

Also, is there such a thing as thrift shopping in your father’s closet? If not, I just made it a thing.

I was heading home from University on a rather grey day and whilst walking, a vintage looking barber shop caught my eye. The door was open and on the bottom right corner was a small picture of Ernest Hemingway…my favorite writer. Though it may be nothing really special to anyone else, I thought it was quite brilliant.


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1 year ago

I wanted it so much. I don't know why I wanted it so much

Ernest Hemingway


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"We would be together and have our books and at night be warm in bed together with the windows open and the stars bright."

-- Ernest Hemingway (A Moveable Feast)


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10 years ago
Society -"Arises The Natural Horror Of Any Person Who Has Discovered A Wealth Of Impostures, Affectedness

Society -"Arises the natural horror of any person who has discovered a wealth of impostures, affectedness and insincerity, of those who pretend to believe in those values, but that belie themselves through their own acts"


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1 year ago
Ernest Hemingway // Unknown
Ernest Hemingway // Unknown

Ernest Hemingway // Unknown


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3 months ago

have read "the sun also rises"/"fiesta" by hemingway. review below

i'd say it is a slice of life about bohemian american expats in paris with lots of casual conversations and description of their leisure, with a side of nature and bullfighting. although not explicitly stated by the narrator/main character, upon closer inspection the book is focused on how the virility (no pun intended, i can't think of a better word) of young men (and possibly women) was broken by ww1 despite wars being supposed to be both outlet and forge of virtue and merit.

i haven't read a lot of hemingway and not big on reading in general, but the intentional omitting of things makes it really good as well as suits the tendency of many characters to avoid thinking about some things. there are a lot of diverse and believable characters, both recurring and mentioned only once. their friendly chat and banter reminded me of philip k dick's "a scanner darkly" in some way. besides war, it depicts issues of living in immigration, loneliness and alienation in a city, scepticism, insecurity, discrimination, feeling emasculated and toxic polycules.

it also has an interesting depiction of a female character's life values but that is up to women to comment. although she also admits to feeling miserable most of the time, it seems she is better adjusted than most of the male characters.

it is sad that 100 hundred years later it is relevant (not talking for everyone) but comforting that people in the past felt the same way. personally i am going to adopt ways of coping depicted in it, such as group trips, spending time outside the city and competitive games/sports. note that any character probably wasn't supposed to be a moral role model probably even at that time: befriend people of other genders for the sake of good friendship, don't blame your irritation with a person on their nationality etc.

cw for this book are mention of discrimination, slurs (i counted 3), animal abuse, a bit of gore, alcohol abuse, consequences of war and a weird open relationship where no one is really happy.

i would also say it might be relevant for trans guys with bottom dysphoria but (ending spoiler ahead) main character doesn't think much about it and eventually realises that it doesn't even matter bc he and his peers are messed up mentally and a healthy dick would not grant a happy relationship. which still might be relevant but i'm not sure if it's the message anyone would be looking for :)

i had a lot of fun first listening to it on youtube and then switching to a paper book, highly recommend it. reading the litcharts review was a bit irritating for me and more gendered than it could be, but provided an interesting insight on where stuff i thought to be just "default" comes from and reflect on my own (civilian) life.


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