The Hemingway Review blog shares information on topics relevant to Hemingway, his writings, and the study of his work. It’s a more casual, less serious space for playful pieces and personal reflections. We will consider videos, audio recordings, slide presentations, photographs, and short pieces of writing (generally 250-500 words). Reflections on teaching and discussions of popular culture are welcome. Please review the blog's submission guidelines and contact Lisa Tyler, blog editor, at lisa.tyler@sinclair.edu if you are interested in contributing to the blog.
Retired librarian Judy Slack describes the Hemingway-related materials in the Wyoming Room of Sheridan County Fulmer Public Library
Jeremy Kaye shares one of the most interesting and frustrating aspects of teaching Hemingway to Gen Z students
Sharon Hamilton visits the neighborhood of the modernist periodical that gave Hemingway his first professional publication
Exploring Hemingway's first publication "A Divine Gesture" in Double Dealer a century ago
The author of Hemingway's Widow reconsiders Hemingway's fourth wife
Editor, Suzanne del Gizo, interviews Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera about a Special Section he organized for the Spring and Fall 2022 issues on "Hemingway as a Caribbean Writer."
Consider the effects of a recent milestone for Hemingway's 1926 novel
Learn how Stone Meredith connects Hemingway's writings on the Spanish Civil War and the Iron Curtain to the conflict in Ukraine
Visit Sylvia Beach's grave in Princeton Cemetery with Verna Kale
Whose typewriter is displayed in the hall in the building where Hemingway and Hadley lived in Chicago?
Sharon Hamilton visits Ernest and Hadley's first apartment in Chicago
What did the Renaissance art historian and Hemingway have to say to each other?
Read the three winning haikus selected by attendees at the Holidays with Hemingway party
Better a bit late than never: In this after-the-fact teaser interview for The Hemingway Review, editor, Suzanne del Gizzo, interviews Ryan Hediger about his essay, "'The Snows of Kilimanjaro' as an Allegory of the Anthropocene," which appears in the Fall 2021 issue.
Dustin Faulstick explains how students in masks interpret the metaphorical mask Nick wears in "The Three-Day Blow"
Stone Meredith explains how she teaches Ernest Hemingway and Zora Neale Hurston to connect today's student writers to voice and place
Veteran professor Peter Hays writes about teaching first-year students in a freshman seminar
Learn about the day-to-day activities of the Lost Generation in Paris through the digitized pages of the Paris Tribune
Dangerous temptation awaits. Patricia Hobson Pottle and Russ Pottle tell us how to get a copy of Hemingway's boat, Pilar, for our very own!
Sharon Hamilton explains how you can follow the 1921 baseball season courtesy of the Society for American Baseball Research.