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Ernest Hemingway
American writer
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Arts & Culture
- In full:
- Ernest Miller Hemingway
- Died:
- July 2, 1961, Ketchum, Idaho (aged 61)
- Awards And Honors:
- Nobel Prize (1954)
- Pulitzer Prize (1953)
- Notable Works:
- “A Clean Well-Lighted Place”
- “A Farewell to Arms”
- “A Moveable Feast”
- “Across the River and Into the Trees”
- “Death in the Afternoon”
- “For Whom the Bell Tolls”
- “Green Hills of Africa”
- “Hills like White Elephants”
- “In Our Time”
- “Islands in the Stream”
- “The Fifth Column”
- “The Old Man and the Sea”
- “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber”
- “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”
- “The Sun Also Rises”
- “To Have and Have Not”
- Notable Family Members:
- spouse Martha Gellhorn
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Ernest Hemingway (born July 21, 1899, Cicero [now in Oak Park], Illinois, U.S.—died July 2, 1961, Ketchum, Idaho) was an American novelist and short-story writer, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. He was noted both for the intense masculinity of his writing and for his adventurous and widely publicized life. His succinct and lucid prose style exerted a powerful influence on American and British fiction in the 20th century. The first son of Clarence Edmonds Hemingway, a doctor, and Grace Hall Hemingway, Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in a suburb of Chicago. He was educated in the public ...(100 of 1799 words)