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Monday, February 9, 2015

WOULD YOU BETRAY A FRIEND FOR A STEP UP THE LADDER?


Today is a sad anniversary ...

 On this day in 1926 Ernest Hemingway ended his contract with his first publisher, Boni & Liveright;

this enabled him to sign with Scribners a week later.


Sherwood Anderson was a friend and mentor to Hemingway, 

a guest at his wedding, and writer of a generous dust-jacket blurb for In Our Time 

 and of letters of introduction allowing Hemingway entry to the Parisian literary scene. 

In a real sense Sherwood was the reason Hemingway got to meet those people 

who would open further doors for him, gaining him the dream of being a successful writer.

The two writers met in a suburb of Chicago named Oak Park 

while Hemingway worked as an editor for the Cooperative Commonwealth in 1919. 

Anderson would go on to help Ernest publish his first successful work 

(inspired by Sherwood’s own writing), In Our Time.

He was a sensitive soul and all his friends knew he had suffered a nervous breakdown in 1912.





 
Hemingway's first book, the story collection In Our Time

had been published by Boni Liveright the previous autumn, 

under a contract that granted them an option on his next three books. 

Hemingway was a rising star with the finished first draft of The Sun Also Rises in his pocket,

 along with tempting offers from other publishers -- Scribners, Knopf and Harcourt, Brace. 

His only way around Horace Liveright was to get him to reject his next manuscript. 

Hemingway's solution?

To submit The Torrents of Spring, a ninety-page satire which he knocked off in eleven days. 

This aimed at a variety of targets, but chief among them was ...

Sherwood Anderson and the writing style of his "Chicago School."

 Anderson was a leading author for Boni & Liveright, 

and Hemingway knew that they wouldn't dare publish his slap at him.




F. Scott Fitzgerald, sadly, had urged Hemingway on.  

John Dos Possoss told him that the book was "heartless and unfunny."

Gertrude Stein was outraged at Hemingway for doing it.

Hadley, Hemingway's wife, 

thought the idea "detestable."  

Sadly, she too was being double-dealed at this stage, and by summer would also be dumped.

In fact,  Hemingway would trash Fitzgerald, Dos Possoss, and Gertrude Stein. 

To know Hemingway was to eventually be betrayed by him. 

Luckily, I have much better friends ...

like Helena 

Who wrote this review for RETURN OF THE LAST SHAMAN:

 If you’re drawn to fast-paced novellas with a strong atmosphere of mystical and Native American spiritual beliefs, 

then this book is for you. Author Roland Yeomans knows how to mix 

shaman Wolf Howl’s otherworldly visions with Lakota gods, an AWOL Mossad assassin, a time-traveling Nikola Tesla, and other dimension possibilities. 

The descriptions are sometimes poetic (“Her translucent skin seemed made of living moonbeams”) 

and sometimes psychologically sharp (“…she got caught living in between her disguise and her distress”).  

Then there are the touches of humor and snark that lighten an otherwise dark apocalyptic story.



THANKS TO ALL MY FRIENDS WHO PLAN TO WRITE REVIEWS OF
RETURN OF THE LAST SHAMAN

5 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for quoting my review! And I meant every word.

    I'm not surprised by this story of Hemingway. He could be a ruthless jerk who put himself and his needs ahead of his friends and family. I still remember an introduction he wrote for a bartender who had written a memoir of his bartending days when Hemingway was a customer. Hemingway could have just concentrated on this poor guy's story, but instead used the intro to take a swipe at his former friend Gertrude Stein. Jerk.

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  2. I hope not. I really hope not.
    Hemingway was a man of talent - but NOT someone I would have liked to have in my life.

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  3. I don't think I'd betray a friend like that, I've never stepped on others for my own benefit. But I have experienced a back stab by someone with less ethical ways. . .I do like Hemingway's writing, but the man could have used a bit more thought in many of his actions.

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  4. No. I couldn't diss a friend for fame and fortune. Very nice review! I have no doubt that this is a great read.

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  5. Helena:
    A self-focused man, Hemingway lost the friends that could have made his life endurable towards the end, sparing him the turmoil that ended in suicide. He regretted losing Hadley all his days.

    Elephant's Child:
    Yes, he was talented but hard on those close to him, harder on himself because of that.

    D.G.:
    Oh, he thought a lot all right ... just the wrong thoughts! Ouch.

    He wrote well, but I grieve for the life he could have had should his choices had been different.

    Shelly:
    I don't think I could do it either. Wasn't it a great review? I think you would like it, too. :-)

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