Postcard or Toronto and Hemingway's passport photos from Toronto Public Library |
Janet
Somerville has a great piece in The Toronto Star about Marianne Miller’s
novel, We Were the Bullfighters….
“Ernest Hemingway’s time in Toronto working for the
Toronto Star sparks a first-time novel” by Janet
Somerville
Author Marianne Miller was intrigued by Hemingway’s first assignment
as a staff reporter: covering the escape of five inmates from Kingston
Penitentiary.
It was
September 1923, and Ernest Hemingway and his wife had
arrived in Toronto from Paris, awaiting the birth of their first child.
Although Ernest had been happily working as a foreign correspondent for the
Toronto Daily Star in Europe since late 1921, he had been hired as a staff
reporter under the grudging direction of Harry Hindmarsh, the paper’s bullying
editor.
On his first
day of work, Hindmarsh sent Hemingway on a night train to Kingston to cover the
story of five convicts who escaped from the penitentiary, including the already notorious
bank robber Norman “Red” Ryan.
Author
Marianne Miller came across that information while researching what was meant
to be a non-fiction book about the
famous author’s time in Toronto. …
Read the rest of Janet's article here.
We
Were the Bullfighters is available from Chapters/Indigo here.
Janet Somerville is the author of Yours, for Probably Always: Martha Gellhorn’s Letters of Love &
War 1930-1949. You can read more about Janet’s book or buy it
at Indigo here.
See Brian Henry's upcoming weekly
writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.
For more about new books from your fellow authors, see here {and scroll down}.
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