Posts Tagged ‘A.E. Hotchner’

Welcome back to another thrilling episode of “As the Feast Turns.” We finally have a balanced review of the restored edition of Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast. Stuart Mitchner’s piece for Town Topics, Princeton’s weekly community paper, is thoughtful and without bias but not without his own criticisms of the text. One of the most important [...]

Bi-polar disorder! Severe alcoholism! Drug abuse! Transgender sexuality! Read all about it! Thanks to Thomas Lipscomb’s tabloid-styled Huffington Post column titled Fast Moves with A Moveable Feast, (07/26) the controversy over grandson Sean Hemingway’s restored edition of A Moveable Feast just took an unnecessary lurid turn. At first Lipscomb sticks to academics, but even then [...]

  Valerie Palmer is a contributing editor to Planet magazine and she blogs at The Slog. Two days ago, Valerie contributed a blog posting regarding the reissue of Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast and Vladimir Nabokov’s posthumous novel, The Original of Laura in a dateline she titled Literary and Scary. Valerie writes: The Nabokov situation frightens [...]

  In a 07/26/09 LA Times review of Scott Donaldson’s book Fitzgerald and Hemingway: Work and Days, Matthew Shaer remarks: According to A.E. Hotchner, a friend of Hemingway’s, the author had all but finished “A Moveable Feast” at his death. Furthermore, Hotchner argues, Mary “had very little involvement with the book.” A new edition is, [...]

Op-Eds usually fall into the category of protected speech — you are, after all, reading one man or woman’s opinion that you are free to take with a grain of salt. But Hemingway biographer A.E. Hotchner’s New York Times Op-Ed on the release of the revised edition of A Moveable Feast (masterfully edited by Sean [...]