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Hemingway

Hemingway is a surname of English origin. It is best known for its association with the American writer Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961) and has been borne by other individuals and places connected to the name.

Ernest Hemingway was a novelist and short-story writer whose concise, direct prose and the iceberg theory influenced

Other notable people with the surname include Mary Welsh Hemingway (1908–1986), a journalist who was Ernest

In summary, Hemingway denotes a surname with literary and cultural significance, most prominently tied to Ernest

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20th-century
literature.
His
major
novels
include
The
Sun
Also
Rises
(1926),
A
Farewell
to
Arms
(1929),
For
Whom
the
Bell
Tolls
(1940),
and
The
Old
Man
and
the
Sea
(1952).
The
Old
Man
and
the
Sea
won
the
Pulitzer
Prize
for
Fiction
in
1953,
and
Hemingway
was
awarded
the
Nobel
Prize
in
Literature
in
1954.
His
experiences
in
World
War
I,
as
well
as
his
time
in
Europe,
Cuba,
and
Key
West,
informed
much
of
his
work.
He
remained
a
prominent
public
figure
until
his
death
in
1961.
Hemingway’s
wife.
The
name
is
also
associated
with
the
Ernest
Hemingway
House
and
Museum
in
Key
West,
Florida,
the
writer’s
former
residence,
which
is
known
for
its
historic
architecture
and
its
population
of
polydactyl
cats.
Hemingway
and
his
contributions
to
modern
literature.