Schaaf
Well-known member
Anybody catch last nights first episode?
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I caught the second half. It’s what you’d expect from Burns on a guy as complicated and interesting as Hemingway. It’s really good. Hemingway actually lived the life I imagined I was living when I was drunk in my twenties.Anybody catch last nights first episode?
This sounded to me like horseshit, so I decided to check it out. I have several scholarly biographies of Hemingway (Dearborn, Hendrickson, Lynn, Mort, Reynolds et al); none mention an incident anything like this. It’s fair to say that Hemingway sympathized with Castro, or at least preferred him to Batista, but the closest thing to the firing squad incident you cite was a claim by Castro when he was touring the U.S. that Hemingway believed political executions in Cuba were “a necessary phenomenon.” That claim was never verified, and of course Hemingway and his wife left for Idaho soon afterward.“He was also a guest of honor at many of Che Guevara’s firing squad massacres. Hemingway loved to watch Che’s firing squads murder hundreds of Cubans. Hemingway would watch the massacres from a picnic chair while sipping Daiquiris.”
Couldn't care less about Hemingway.
He was a Castro backer and was invited to attend a killing by firing squad of some Castro dissidents.
It's reported that he and Castro sat by a fire with drinks, watching the sunset and the shootings.
Mea culpa! Got it wrong! Here's the quote!
“Hemingway hailed Castro’s revolution as ‘very pure and beautiful,'” Fontova said. “He was also a guest of honor at many of Che Guevara’s firing squad massacres. Hemingway loved to watch Che’s firing squads murder hundreds of Cubans. Hemingway would watch the massacres from a picnic chair while sipping
You got to it before I did... haha.This sounded to me like horseshit, so I decided to check it out. I have several scholarly biographies of Hemingway (Dearborn, Hendrickson, Lynn, Mort, Reynolds et al); none mention an incident anything like this. It’s fair to say that Hemingway sympathized with Castro, or at least preferred him to Batista, but the closest thing to the firing squad incident you cite was a claim by Castro when he was touring the U.S. that Hemingway believed political executions in Cuba were “a necessary phenomenon.” That claim was never verified, and of course Hemingway and his wife left for Idaho soon afterward.
So, maybe read a book instead of the Daily Caller.
You got your opinion, I got mine.This sounded to me like horseshit, so I decided to check it out. I have several scholarly biographies of Hemingway (Dearborn, Hendrickson, Lynn, Mort, Reynolds et al); none mention an incident anything like this. It’s fair to say that Hemingway sympathized with Castro, or at least preferred him to Batista, but the closest thing to the firing squad incident you cite was a claim by Castro when he was touring the U.S. that Hemingway believed political executions in Cuba were “a necessary phenomenon.” That claim was never verified, and of course Hemingway and his wife left for Idaho soon afterward.
So, maybe read a book instead of the Daily Caller.
Yeah, it is horseshit. Read Chapman's review of Fontova's book ("Rewriting Cuban History"). Typical of the misinformation crap found on Townhall website.This sounded to me like horseshit, so I decided to check it out. I have several scholarly biographies of Hemingway (Dearborn, Hendrickson, Lynn, Mort, Reynolds et al); none mention an incident anything like this. It’s fair to say that Hemingway sympathized with Castro, or at least preferred him to Batista, but the closest thing to the firing squad incident you cite was a claim by Castro when he was touring the U.S. that Hemingway believed political executions in Cuba were “a necessary phenomenon.” That claim was never verified, and of course Hemingway and his wife left for Idaho soon afterward.
So, maybe read a book instead of the Daily Caller.