Writers’ Rituals for Writing: Our “Guy” is the second one below. (Some introductory portions left out for length.)

 

 

 

One of the Last who was there: I was away the week this happened so this is late. Patrick (Mouse) was along with AE Hotchner who passed away a few years ago was one of the last to really know Hemingway. It is with great sorrow that I read of his passing. A true gentleman and holder of the legacy. RIP, dear Patrick.

Patrick Hemingway: The Hemingway son who tended to his father’s legacy
The Week US
2 min read

 

 Patrick Hemingway.

His father’s outsized reputation, Patrick said, “didn’t bother me because I don’t think that I was terribly ambitious.” . | Credit: Paul Marotta / Getty Images

Patrick Hemingway was comfortable in the shadow of his famous father, Ernest Hemingway. Though the elder Hemingway was famously troubled and mercurial, their affection was deep and mutual. “I would rather fish with you and shoot with you than anybody that I have ever known since I was a boy,” Ernest wrote in a letter to his son. Patrick completed Ernest’s unfinished novel True at First Lightand published Dear Papa, a collection of 120 letters the two exchanged over a period of 30 years. His father’s outsized reputation, Patrick said, “didn’t bother me because I don’t think that I was terribly ambitious.”

Patrick Miller Hemingway was born in Kansas City, Mo., to Ernest and his second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer, during a stopover in the family’s many travels. The middle child of three boys, Patrick mostly spent his childhood “in Key West with summers in Wyoming and Idaho while his private school education was punctuated by regular hunting and fishing trips,” said The Times (U.K.). Inspired by his father’s 1935 novel The Green Hills of Africa, Patrick moved to Tanzania in 1951, funding the move by selling the Arkansas plantation he inherited on his mother’s death. He became a safari guide, hunter, and forestry officer for the United Nations, returning to the U.S. in 1975.

Hemingway “managed a long life in a family haunted by suicide and mental illness,” said the Associated Press. Patrick’s brother Gregory, who transitioned and adopted the name Gloria, struggled with alcohol abuse and died in a Miami jail cell in 2001. Ernest famously suffered from depression and alcoholism and shot himself in 1961. “Under proper treatment, he would have had a nice old age

FOR POETS OUT THERE!!!! It would be fun!!

Poetry retreat planned for Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum in November

The Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center (HPMEC) will host a poetry workshop on Saturday, Nov. 8.

ContributedArkansas State University

Jonesboro, AR – (Contributed) – Sept. 13, 2025 – The Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center (HPMEC) will host a poetry workshop on Saturday, Nov. 8.

The event will honor novelist Ernest Hemingway, who spent nearly a decade writing and living in Piggott at the site of HPMEC.

“The retreat offers writers the opportunity to work on personal creative writing, share their work, receive feedback, and interact with others interested in writing,” said Shannon Williams, director of HPMC.

The cost for the retreat is $35 for members of HPMC and $40 for nonmembers.

“The retreat is structured to be interactive and a time when friendships are formed, craft is honed, and creativity is enhanced,” Williams added.

The retreat is a one-day event that will start at 10 a.m. Participants will spend the morning writing short poems, using old-fashioned rhyme and rhythm, followed by a provided lunch. From 12:30 until 4 p.m. authors will work on composition of poems and collaborate with other attendees. A complimentary tour of HPMC will follow.

Those interested in attending may reach out to Williams at shwilliams@AState.edu or call 870-598-1637.

 

Looks like fun! If you are in Idaho . . . check it out!

advertisement

Hemingway Seminar to explore Paris through ‘A Moveable Feast’

Annual event highlights Ernest Hemingway’s legacy with scholars, exhibits and community discussion

25-08-22-Community Library Party-Roland-10
The Community Library, pictured during a recent anniversary celebration, will host its annual Hemingway Seminar this week.

The Community Library’s annual Ernest Hemingway Seminar will return Thursday through Saturday, inviting readers, writers and scholars to reflect on one of the author’s most beloved works: “A Moveable Feast.”

This year’s seminar, “Never Any Ending to Paris: Journeying through ‘A Moveable Feast,’” will center on Hemingway’s sketches of 1920s Paris, created during a period when he was a young writer honing his craft among artists, musicians and literary figures who would shape modernist culture.

“‘A Moveable Feast’ offers us insight into Hemingway’s early days as an artist and invites reflection on memory and nostalgia in his writing,” said Martha Williams, the library’s director of programs and education. “We’re especially excited to welcome Dr. Seán Hemingway, Ernest’s grandson and the editor of the 2009 restored edition of the text, as our opening keynote speaker. Seán will help us dive into the work, what Ernest intended for his memoir, and why it continues to resonate for readers and writers today.”

Idaho

The seminar will open Thursday, Sept. 4, with a 5 p.m. reception catered by Roots Wine Bar and Bottle Shop, followed by Dr. Hemingway’s keynote at 6 p.m. Over the following two days, sessions will explore the book’s style and tone, the characters who inspired its creation and the broader artistic and cultural atmosphere of Hemingway’s Paris.

Featured speakers include Hilary Justice, the Patrick and Carol T. Hemingway scholar-in-residence at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, and Barbara Groth of the Nomadic School of Wonder, who will lead a presentation on Hemingway’s “art of noticing.”

Clyde Moneyhun, Ph.D., Stacey Guill, Ph.D., and Mac Test, Ph.D., will also return as presenters from Boise State University. Additional speakers include Cathy MacHold, Eileen Martin, Greer Rising and Jennifer Sander.

Francesca Wade, author of the forthcoming “Gertrude Stein: an Afterlife,” will join virtually from the United Kingdom to discuss Stein’s influence and legacy. Talks on Stein, Parisian music and the city’s artistic culture will help place Hemingway’s recollections in a broader context.

The seminar will conclude Saturday, Sept. 6, with a 4:30 p.m. reception catered by Silver Fox Catering.

In-person tickets for the event are $95, and virtual participation is open for $30. Full details and registration links can be found at comlib.org.

Complementing the seminar is a new exhibit, “From Paris to Hemingway’s Idaho: ‘Hunger Was Good Discipline,’” curated by Riley Bradshaw, the library’s 2025 Hemingway in Idaho research fellow. Opening today, Wednesday, Sept. 3, in the Library foyer, the exhibit connects Hemingway’s time in Paris with his later life in Ketchum, featuring objects from his final home. It will remain on display through December.