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By the ’60s, the brand rose to popularity when its iconic Oysterman hat was featured on the notable noggin of Ernest Hemingway in photos for a profile in Life magazine.
Seán Hemingway on the Best Safari Trophy He Ever Took Home The curator and grandson of Ernest Hemingway recalls his family’s fascination with Africa and explains his own connection to the continent ...
Hemingway in Africa: The Last Safari ( 2003-10-13 17:04) (Agencies) Ernest Hemingway made only a couple of short trips to Africa, the first in 1933-34 and the second two decades later, but the ...
Ernest Hemingway was fascinated by death. He actively sought out experiences that would allow him to become intimate with death and dying, from his presence on every major warfront during his ...
Patrick Hemingway was the second son of Ernest Hemingway, and the author's first child with second wife Pauline Pfeiffer. Patrick was affectionately known within the family as "Mouse," a nickname ...
Ernest Hemingway: A New Life by James M. Hutchisson (Penn State University Press, 320 pp., $37.95) N orman Mailer once located courage in Ernest Hemingway’s manic depression. Proof of this ...
There are countless biographies of Ernest Hemingway, but none of his beloved fishing boat, Pilar. A new book by Paul Hendrickson looks at the great writer's relationship with the boat.
Ernest Hemingway is shown on his second East African safari in 1953. Today hunting is strictly prohibited, resulting in rejuvenation of big game in Africa's Mara and Serengeti to levels not seen ...
A four-page letter that Ernest Hemingway wrote to his lawyer after the writer survived two back-to-back plane crashes in East Africa in 1954 sold at auction for $237,055, according to Nate Sanders ...
Ernest Hemingway made two game-hunting safaris in Africa, both through Kenya, Tanganyika (now Tanzania), and Uganda. The first was in 1933, the second 1953. For Hemingway in Africa, Christopher ...
Ernest Hemingway may command few literary equals, but it turns out bearing a passing resemblance to the famed novelist can be more easily achieved.
It was by hunting that Pretorius made his living and his legendary reputation. His lifetime bag for elephants alone was 557; and after one six-month safari his take for ivory was worth £3,600.
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