For Fascism is a lie told by bullies.
Once a man’s married he’s absolutely bitched.
~ in The Three-Day Blow
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by kevinstilley
For Fascism is a lie told by bullies.
Once a man’s married he’s absolutely bitched.
~ in The Three-Day Blow
__________
RELATED CONTENT
__________
by kevinstilley
It is said that when Truman Capote died Gore Vidal commented, “Good career move.”
Maybe that is a bit crassly stated, but frequently the death of an author will result in a tremendous upsurge in book sales. Not only that, but sometimes posthumous works multiply. Consider the list of posthumous books by Ernest Hemingway (source: Casanova Was A Book Lover);
A Moveable Feast (1964)
The Fifth Column and Four Unpublished Stories of the Spanish Civil War (1969)
Island in the Stream (1970)
The Nick Adams Stories (1972)
Along With Youth: Hemingway, the Early Years (1985)
The Dangerous Summer (1985)
Ernest Hemingway: Dateline Toronto (1985)
The Garden of Eden ( 1986)
The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway: The Finca Vigia Edition (1987)
Hemingway: The Toronto Years (1994)
The Good Lion (1998)
At the Hemingways: with Fifty Years of Correspondence between Ernest and Marcelline Hemingway (1999)
True at First Light (1999)
[A few of the above are either biographies or collections that contain previously unpublished materials.]
Wow, Ernest Hemingway published more after he was dead than most of us will during our lifetime.
by kevinstilley
John McCain(R): A Hemingway hero inspired him
By MATT STEARNS
WASHINGTON — For John McCain, everything goes back to a book he picked up in his father’s study nearly 60 years ago.
Before his 2000 presidential run made the Arizona Republican senator a political phenomenon. Before his campaign-finance crusade cemented his reformer bona fides. Before the Keating Five scandal nearly cost him what he holds most dear – his reputation. Before the now-legendary U.S. Navy career and its brutal years in a North Vietnamese prison.
Helping guide McCain through it all was a novel: Ernest Hemingway’s “ For Whom the Bell Tolls,” and its protagonist, Robert Jordan, who dies serving a noble but doomed cause in the Spanish Civil War. It was devoured by a precocious 13-year-old who was searching for a way to reconcile his emerging iconoclasm with the rigors of the naval career that his Navy family expected of him.
Young McCain finished the book “aspiring to Jordan’s courage and nobility and certain I would possess it someday,” McCain wrote in his 2002 memoir “Worth the Fighting For,” a title taken from a line in the novel.
“My No. 1 hero of all time!” McCain reiterated earlier this year. “I am an incurable idealist and romantic. Robert Jordan is everything I ever wanted to be. I read that book at age 13 and now at age 70. Nothing’s changed.” (Read more…)
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