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#thesunalsorises — Public Fediverse posts

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  1. Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises – One True Podcast – Hemingway Society and Foundation

    One True Podcast

    One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries.

    The show is supported by the Hemingway Society and Foundation, the University of Evansville, and Florida Gulf Coast University. Numerous people have made this endeavor possible:

    Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises

    Share on Facebook, Share on Twitter. Share on LinkedIn, Subscribe with Apple Podcasts. Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 29, 2026

    Throughout the course of this year, we will celebrate the centenary of The Sun Also Rises by inviting guests on the show to talk about fascinating aspects of the book and its rich history. 

    In this episode, we explore how the book was actually written—from a sloppy first draft to a modernist masterpiece. What will tracing this composition history tells us about the evolution of The Sun Also Rises and Hemingway’s own development as a writer?

    To help us explore this topic, Carl Eby joins us once again! Eby is the former President of the Hemingway Society and has focused much of his research on Hemingway’s posthumous work. He has joined us previously for episodes on Islands in the Stream and The Garden of Eden, and he also inaugurated our One True Sentence series with One True Sentence #1, a discussion of Hemingway’s “Paris 1922” sketches.

    Thanks to the support of Simon & Schuster, this episode also includes an audio portion from William Hurt’s narration of The Sun Also Rises

    Editor’s Note: Embedded below is the Spotify audio of the podcast. –DrWeb

    Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.hemingwaysociety.org/carl-eby-how-hemingway-wrote-sun-also-rises

    Tags: Apple Podcasts, Carl Eby, development, Ernest Hemingway, Fiction, Hemingway, Hemingway Society and Foundation, Narration, One True Podcast, Podcast, Simon & Schuster, Spotify, The Sun Also Rises, William Hurt, Writing, Wrote
    #ApplePodcasts #CarlEby #development #ErnestHemingway #Fiction #Hemingway #HemingwaySocietyAndFoundation #Narration #OneTruePodcast #Podcast #SimonSchuster #Spotify #TheSunAlsoRises #WilliamHurt #Writing #Wrote
  2. Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises – One True Podcast – Hemingway Society and Foundation

    One True Podcast

    One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries.

    The show is supported by the Hemingway Society and Foundation, the University of Evansville, and Florida Gulf Coast University. Numerous people have made this endeavor possible:

    Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises

    Share on Facebook, Share on Twitter. Share on LinkedIn, Subscribe with Apple Podcasts. Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 29, 2026

    Throughout the course of this year, we will celebrate the centenary of The Sun Also Rises by inviting guests on the show to talk about fascinating aspects of the book and its rich history. 

    In this episode, we explore how the book was actually written—from a sloppy first draft to a modernist masterpiece. What will tracing this composition history tells us about the evolution of The Sun Also Rises and Hemingway’s own development as a writer?

    To help us explore this topic, Carl Eby joins us once again! Eby is the former President of the Hemingway Society and has focused much of his research on Hemingway’s posthumous work. He has joined us previously for episodes on Islands in the Stream and The Garden of Eden, and he also inaugurated our One True Sentence series with One True Sentence #1, a discussion of Hemingway’s “Paris 1922” sketches.

    Thanks to the support of Simon & Schuster, this episode also includes an audio portion from William Hurt’s narration of The Sun Also Rises

    Editor’s Note: Embedded below is the Spotify audio of the podcast. –DrWeb

    Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.hemingwaysociety.org/carl-eby-how-hemingway-wrote-sun-also-rises

    Tags: Apple Podcasts, Carl Eby, development, Ernest Hemingway, Fiction, Hemingway, Hemingway Society and Foundation, Narration, One True Podcast, Podcast, Simon & Schuster, Spotify, The Sun Also Rises, William Hurt, Writing, Wrote
    #ApplePodcasts #CarlEby #development #ErnestHemingway #Fiction #Hemingway #HemingwaySocietyAndFoundation #Narration #OneTruePodcast #Podcast #SimonSchuster #Spotify #TheSunAlsoRises #WilliamHurt #Writing #Wrote
  3. Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises – One True Podcast – Hemingway Society and Foundation

    One True Podcast

    One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries.

    The show is supported by the Hemingway Society and Foundation, the University of Evansville, and Florida Gulf Coast University. Numerous people have made this endeavor possible:

    Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises

    Share on Facebook, Share on Twitter. Share on LinkedIn, Subscribe with Apple Podcasts. Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 29, 2026

    Throughout the course of this year, we will celebrate the centenary of The Sun Also Rises by inviting guests on the show to talk about fascinating aspects of the book and its rich history. 

    In this episode, we explore how the book was actually written—from a sloppy first draft to a modernist masterpiece. What will tracing this composition history tells us about the evolution of The Sun Also Rises and Hemingway’s own development as a writer?

    To help us explore this topic, Carl Eby joins us once again! Eby is the former President of the Hemingway Society and has focused much of his research on Hemingway’s posthumous work. He has joined us previously for episodes on Islands in the Stream and The Garden of Eden, and he also inaugurated our One True Sentence series with One True Sentence #1, a discussion of Hemingway’s “Paris 1922” sketches.

    Thanks to the support of Simon & Schuster, this episode also includes an audio portion from William Hurt’s narration of The Sun Also Rises

    Editor’s Note: Embedded below is the Spotify audio of the podcast. –DrWeb

    Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.hemingwaysociety.org/carl-eby-how-hemingway-wrote-sun-also-rises

    Tags: Apple Podcasts, Carl Eby, development, Ernest Hemingway, Fiction, Hemingway, Hemingway Society and Foundation, Narration, One True Podcast, Podcast, Simon & Schuster, Spotify, The Sun Also Rises, William Hurt, Writing, Wrote
    #ApplePodcasts #CarlEby #development #ErnestHemingway #Fiction #Hemingway #HemingwaySocietyAndFoundation #Narration #OneTruePodcast #Podcast #SimonSchuster #Spotify #TheSunAlsoRises #WilliamHurt #Writing #Wrote
  4. Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises – One True Podcast – Hemingway Society and Foundation

    One True Podcast

    One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries.

    The show is supported by the Hemingway Society and Foundation, the University of Evansville, and Florida Gulf Coast University. Numerous people have made this endeavor possible:

    Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises

    Share on Facebook, Share on Twitter. Share on LinkedIn, Subscribe with Apple Podcasts. Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 29, 2026

    Throughout the course of this year, we will celebrate the centenary of The Sun Also Rises by inviting guests on the show to talk about fascinating aspects of the book and its rich history. 

    In this episode, we explore how the book was actually written—from a sloppy first draft to a modernist masterpiece. What will tracing this composition history tells us about the evolution of The Sun Also Rises and Hemingway’s own development as a writer?

    To help us explore this topic, Carl Eby joins us once again! Eby is the former President of the Hemingway Society and has focused much of his research on Hemingway’s posthumous work. He has joined us previously for episodes on Islands in the Stream and The Garden of Eden, and he also inaugurated our One True Sentence series with One True Sentence #1, a discussion of Hemingway’s “Paris 1922” sketches.

    Thanks to the support of Simon & Schuster, this episode also includes an audio portion from William Hurt’s narration of The Sun Also Rises

    Editor’s Note: Embedded below is the Spotify audio of the podcast. –DrWeb

    Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.hemingwaysociety.org/carl-eby-how-hemingway-wrote-sun-also-rises

    #ApplePodcasts #CarlEby #development #ErnestHemingway #Fiction #Hemingway #HemingwaySocietyAndFoundation #Narration #OneTruePodcast #Podcast #SimonSchuster #Spotify #TheSunAlsoRises #WilliamHurt #Writing #Wrote
  5. Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises – One True Podcast – Hemingway Society and Foundation

    One True Podcast

    One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries.

    The show is supported by the Hemingway Society and Foundation, the University of Evansville, and Florida Gulf Coast University. Numerous people have made this endeavor possible:

    Carl Eby on How Hemingway Wrote The Sun Also Rises

    Share on Facebook, Share on Twitter. Share on LinkedIn, Subscribe with Apple Podcasts. Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 29, 2026

    Throughout the course of this year, we will celebrate the centenary of The Sun Also Rises by inviting guests on the show to talk about fascinating aspects of the book and its rich history. 

    In this episode, we explore how the book was actually written—from a sloppy first draft to a modernist masterpiece. What will tracing this composition history tells us about the evolution of The Sun Also Rises and Hemingway’s own development as a writer?

    To help us explore this topic, Carl Eby joins us once again! Eby is the former President of the Hemingway Society and has focused much of his research on Hemingway’s posthumous work. He has joined us previously for episodes on Islands in the Stream and The Garden of Eden, and he also inaugurated our One True Sentence series with One True Sentence #1, a discussion of Hemingway’s “Paris 1922” sketches.

    Thanks to the support of Simon & Schuster, this episode also includes an audio portion from William Hurt’s narration of The Sun Also Rises

    Editor’s Note: Embedded below is the Spotify audio of the podcast. –DrWeb

    Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.hemingwaysociety.org/carl-eby-how-hemingway-wrote-sun-also-rises

    Tags: Apple Podcasts, Carl Eby, development, Ernest Hemingway, Fiction, Hemingway, Hemingway Society and Foundation, Narration, One True Podcast, Podcast, Simon & Schuster, Spotify, The Sun Also Rises, William Hurt, Writing, Wrote
    #ApplePodcasts #CarlEby #development #ErnestHemingway #Fiction #Hemingway #HemingwaySocietyAndFoundation #Narration #OneTruePodcast #Podcast #SimonSchuster #Spotify #TheSunAlsoRises #WilliamHurt #Writing #Wrote
  6. Ross K. Tangedal on Hemingway in 1926 -The Hemingway Society

    Ross K. Tangedal on Hemingway in 1926

    Subscribe with Apple Podcasts, Subscribe with RSS, Download this episode

    January 01, 2026

    Happy New Year from One True Podcast! We look forward to a rich, exciting 2026 by looking back to 1926.

    In our first show of the year, we ask an esteemed guest to take us back exactly one hundred years to see what was happening in Hemingway’s life, work, and world. So, to guide us through Hemingway’s 1926 — his travels, his relationships, his publishing, and his writing – we welcome the great Hemingway scholar Ross K. Tangedal.

    For Hemingway, 1926 was a colossally important year that saw his transition from Hadley to his second wife, Pauline; the transition from Boni & Liveright to Scribner’s; and the publication of The Torrents of Spring and The Sun Also Rises, both crucially important for different reasons. Tangedal guides us through this remarkable year in Hemingway’s life and his writing. We have previously begun calendar years with flashback episodes featuring: Mary Dearborn on 1922; James M. Hutchisson on 1923; Verna Kale on 1924; and J. Gerald Kennedy on 1925. We encourage you to check out those past shows to get up to date!

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Ross K. Tangedal on Hemingway in 1926 | The Hemingway Society

    Tags: 1926, 2026, Ernest Hemingway, Hadley, Hemingway, January 1, Move to Scribner's, One True Podcast, Pauline, Podcast, The Hemingway Society, The Sun Also Rises, The Torrents of Spring
    #1926 #2026 #ErnestHemingway #Hadley #Hemingway #January1 #MoveToScribnerS #OneTruePodcast #Pauline #Podcast #TheHemingwaySociety #TheSunAlsoRises #TheTorrentsOfSpring
  7. 99 years later, “The Sun Also Rises” is still delicious – Salon.com

    essay

    99 years later, “The Sun Also Rises” is still delicious

    A modern traveler retraces Hemingway’s footsteps through Spain, one glass of vermút and Basque pintxo at a time

    By Howie Southworth, Author of “Hemingway’s Spanish Table”

    Published November 8, 2025 10:30AM (EST)

    Roast suckling pig at Botin in Madrid (Howie Southworth) Facebook X Reddit Email

    Act 1: The Road to Hemingway’s Spain

    Ernest Hemingway’s “The Sun Also Rises” begins in Paris but it doesn’t stay there. It follows a group of post-World War I expatriates, led by the emotionally distant narrator Jake Barnes and the captivating Lady Brett Ashley, with whom he shares a deep, impossible love. Their chaotic summer journey is joined by Brett’s fiancé, the troubled Mike Campbell, the charming but cynical Bill Gorton and the perpetually lost Robert Cohn, who is hopelessly infatuated with Brett.

    The novel finds its messy center in Pamplona during the festival of San Fermín and the running of the bulls, a story of camaraderie, longing, and disillusionment. Beneath the clipped prose and bullfight bravado is a meditation on appetite, both emotional and physical. Food and drink mark the rhythm of the novel, from an early evening absinthe to trout beside the Irati River. What the characters eat reveals who they are, or who they wish they weren’t.

    We begin our own journey in Bayonne, not Paris.

    Related: I drank like Hemingway in Hong Kong

    The city is rather overrun now than in the roaring 1920s, but the bones of Hemingway’s Europe remain if you know where to glance over coffee. “It’s the caffeine in it. Caffeine, we are here. Caffeine puts a man on her horse and a woman in his grave,” writes Jake Barnes. Coffee in the novel means moments of grounding, clarity, normalcy and lays a foundation for our day. Within view from where we enjoy a buttered baguette and sip our café au lait, the cathedral’s twin towers rise above the tiled roofs, and just beside us, tucked behind faded red shutters, is the ghost of the Hotel Panier Fleuri, where Jake stayed en route to Pamplona.

    We stroll across the Pont Neuf, its international flags snapping in the morning breeze. The Nive and the Adour meet beneath our feet. It’s barely 10 a.m. and already the day promises heat. At the midpoint of the bridge, we hesitate. Ahead is the rest of France. Behind us, a story yet to be told. We turn back toward the car. Time to head to Spain.

    (Howie Southworth) Cafe au lait in Bayonne

    It’s mid-morning and the car hums past the border and into Navarra. The road winds through the foothills like a prelude, each turn offering a sharper light and a deeper green. We stop to appreciate the color and a local omelet. Our first glimpse of Pamplona’s sandstone walls is a jolt. This city may be small, but in 1926 it became immortal, the place where a fiesta, thundering hooves, and a novel collided to shape modern legend.

    We’ve come for the smaller festival, San Fermín Txikito, held each Fall to commemorate the saint’s original canonization, before the Summer celebrations stole Hemingway’s heart and the international spotlight. No bulls. No fireworks or colored kerchiefs just yet. Castillo Square is hushed, the anticipation almost audible.

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: 99 years later, “The Sun Also Rises” is still delicious – Salon.com

    Tags: Basque pintxo, Books, Delicious, Ernest Hemingway, Food, Hemingway's Drinks, Hemingway's Spanish Table, Jake Barnes, Lady Brett Ashley, Navarra, Pamplona, Paris, Salon, San Fermin, Spain, The Sun Also Rises, Traveler, Vermut

    #BasquePintxo #Books #Delicious #ErnestHemingway #Food #HemingwaySDrinks #HemingwaySSpanishTable #JakeBarnes #LadyBrettAshley #Navarra #Pamplona #Paris #Salon #SanFermin #Spain #TheSunAlsoRises #Traveler #Vermut

  8. Hemos aprovechado que hoy estamos a 37º como es #tradición en la Granada del #findelmundo y que la realidad nos la cuentan como si fuera una novela de Bolaño pero mal contada para recuperar nuestro horario de INVIERNO.
    .
    De 10 a 2 y de 5 a 8, de lunes a sábados.
    .
    #thesunalsorises
    .
    libreriapraga.com