Typed letters signed (2) and autograph letter signed : Fincia Vigia, Cuba, to "Pickle" [Mary Welsh], [1945] Apr. 13 and Sept. 1. and [n.d.].

ArchivalResource

Typed letters signed (2) and autograph letter signed : Fincia Vigia, Cuba, to "Pickle" [Mary Welsh], [1945] Apr. 13 and Sept. 1. and [n.d.].

Concerning his love for her, the loneliness of life without her and memories of Chicago before 1928. "I got so tired of ViਠPomal and so lonesome for the lovely simple Paris restaurants where you could eat just what you wanted, in the amount you wanted and have the wine with it that you wanted. By next year we will have that I think ... You know I can write a book just as well in Paris as down here. This was just sort of a war-time thing. Nobody doomed to here. Can work in the Basque country, in Paris, anywhere in the hills, in Spain ..." "Dearest Pickle you always say I write better letters than I talk or act but that is because, in spite of talking so much, I am faintly inarticulate and my conduct always falls behind my intentions or between two stools."

3 items (5 p.) ; 28 cm. or smaller + with one envelope.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7218583

Related Entities

There are 2 Entities related to this resource.

Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6m14xvn (person)

Born in 1899, Ernest Hemingway was the second of six children born to Grace Hall and Clarence Edmonds Hemingway. Ernest developed a love of literature and music from his mother, a trained opera singer and music teacher after her marriage, and gained a keen interest in outdoor sports--hunting, fishing, woodscraft--from his father, a doctor and avid naturalist. Divided between the family's home in Oak Park, Illinois, and their summer cottage on Lake Waldoon in Michigan, Ernest's chil...

Hemingway, Mary Welsh (1908- ).

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66q2r51 (person)

Mary Welsh Hemingway (1908-1986), journalist and author, was the wife of Ernest Hemingway. She grew up in and around Bemidji, Minnesota, where she attended public schools. Her fondest childhood memories were of canoe trips with her father in the lake country. "Up to the late teens of our century we lived in a world that was then remote and has now vanished at the insistence of lumbermen, plowmen, and road-builders," she wrote in her autobiography, How It Was (1976). Her father''s business declin...