![]() ![]() Clarence Hemingway, a keen sportsman, and with friends like Howell Jenkins, Lewis Clarahan, John Pentecost, Bill Smith, Al Walker, and others, on rivers and in lakes in northern Michigan, near the family’s summer home on Walloon Lake, near Petoskey. The creel over his shoulder looks large enough to carry one hundred brook trout. There is a wonderful photograph of Hemingway, already a fisherman, with a broad-brimmed straw hat and a huge cane pole it was taken on Horton’s Creek, near Charlevoix, Michigan, when he was five years old. And the subject? “There was no choice at all.” “What did I know best that I had not written about and lost?” Hemingway asks in A Moveable Feast, as he recalls sitting in a corner of the Closerie des Lilas on the rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs in 1924 and beginning to write “Big Two-Hearted River.” It was to be his longest story until then-some one hundred pages of handwritten manuscript. From the early Nick Adams stories and the memorable chapters on fishing the Irati River in The Sun Also Rises to such late novels as Islands in the Stream, this collection traces the evolution of a great writer's passion the range of his interests the sure use he made of fishing, transforming it into the stuff of great literature.Īnglers and lovers of great writing alike will welcome this important collection. Hemingway on Fishing is an encompassing, diverse, and fascinating collection. His last books, The Old Man and the Sea and Islands in the Stream, celebrate his vast knowledge of the ocean and his affection for its great denizens. He also wrote articles for the Toronto Star on fishing in Canada and Europe and, later, articles for Esquire about his growing passion for big-game fishing. In A Moveable Feast, Hemingway speaks of sitting in a café in Paris and writing about what he knew best-and when it came time to stop, he “did not want to leave the river.” The story was the unforgettable classic, “Big Two-Hearted River,” and from its first words we do not want to leave the river either. Here, collected for the first time in one volume, are all of his great writings about the many kinds of fishing he did-from angling for trout in the rivers of northern Michigan to fishing for marlin in the Gulf Stream. ![]() He fished the lakes and creeks near the family’s summer home at Walloon Lake, Michigan, and his first stories and pieces of journalism were often about his favorite sport. ![]() The first and only collection of the Nobel Prize-winning author’s writings on America's great passion-fishing-introduced and edited by Nick Lyons with a foreword by Jack Hemingway.įrom childhood on, Ernest Hemingway was a passionate fisherman. ![]()
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