Sunday, December 10, 2006

Can I Check My Shampoo Bottle

HEMINGWAY, THE BIG

Although the universal form of Hemingway as a writer rests on his literary work, novels and stories that creates a new artistic expression in contemporary literature, it is important not to forget his journalistic career for over four decades. Often not paid attention to their reports, yet the practice and the extensive experience that provides help in newspapers and magazines are essential not only to the entity the subject of his works of genius, but also for the extraordinary characteristic of his style.

temporarily career starts entering a trainee reporter at The Kansas City Star, where he writes valuable lessons of objectivity, simplicity and brevity under the aegis of the distinguished editor of CG Wellington. Early in the second decade of the century, a major step forward in their desire to be a writer, with lively articles published in The Toronto Star-that earned her the position of the newspaper correspondent in Paris, where he polishes his style in practice. The passage of time does not interrupt his journalistic career, during the third decade of writing unique articles and essays for Esquire in Key West, then visu chronicles of the English Civil War, after political and military analysis of the Sino-Japanese MP, later, on the Second World War, and finally a sazonadísima chronicle their adventures in Africa.

Few correspondents have produced a work so realistic and impressive as Hemingway left us. Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in Oak Park, Illinois, July 21, 1899 and was found dead in Ketchum, Idaho, on July 2, 1961. American writer, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954 and the Pulitzer Prize. He worked as a reporter for the Kansas City Star until the First World War, in which he participated as an ambulance driver, was wounded at the front austroitaliano. In 1924 worked as correspondent for the Toronto Star in Paris.

During the English civil war served as a war correspondent in Madrid and that experience inspired one of his greatest works, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and his only play, The Fifth Column. At the end of World War II he settled in Cuba, where he worked with exiles from the English Civil War counterintelligence. In 1959 he suffered a serious accident in the town of Aranda de Duero Burgos. In 1960, after Fidel Castro took possession of his house Watcher, he moved to Idaho. He suffered severe depressive processes, which made him to be hospitalized twice, and committed suicide a year later, firing a shot with a shotgun.

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