Ernest Hemingway was not only one of the most important 20th-century American writers, but also a man whose adventurous and colorful life has become the stuff of legend. War correspondent, ambulance driver, and big-game hunter, he was married four times and his love life was inextricably bound up with his artistic endeavors. His first marriage to Hadley Richardsonâwith whom he lived in Paris in the early 1920sâhas long fascinated readers. Their passionate, complicated, and ultimately âdoomedâ relationship coincided with Hemingwayâs formative years as a member of the so-called Lost Generation, and the failed marriage had a lifelong impact on the man and his writing.
In The Paris Husband, author and Hemingway scholar Scott Donaldson deftly separates fact from fiction to present a spellbinding and clear-eyed account of this seminal period in Hemingwayâs life. Brilliantly utilizing all essential primary and secondary sourcesâincluding the authorâs notebooks and draftsâDonaldson breathes new life into this ageless story, providing revelatory insights into Hemingwayâs character and exploring the nuances of a magical, yet troubled, love affair.
For anyone interested in Hemingwayâs development as an artist and why, as an older man, he continued to revisit this transformative and painful episode in his life, The Paris Husband is a lucid, accessible, and compelling narrative that will engage both diehard Hemingway fans, as well as those just discovering this iconic writer.