Hemingway: Rock Star Of Famous American Authors

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By Mickey Jhonny


The reader may feel a bit incredulous at suggesting an early 20th century writer be memorialized by a term which only came into common usage a number of years after his death. However, I hope to demonstrate that Hemingway was indeed the template replicated by such a large number of the rock stars who crashed and burned after meteoric ascents, in the decades just subsequent to Hemingway's death in 1961.

Hemingway is well placed on our list of top 20 most famous American authors . He deserves his place for his literary accomplishments, but the significance of his literary achievement is transcended by his role as the model of artistic celebrity that shaped the 20th century.

Still in his 20s he rocketed to critical acclaim with his anguished and restless novella The Sun Also Rises. Just a couple years later, still basking in his critical cache, he also became a bestselling author, with the publication of A Farewell to Arms. The latter was sandwiched between a pair of story collections that were so remarkable that it is fair to say that Hemingway singlehandedly reinvented the short story. Stories like A Day's Wait, A Clean and Well-Lighted Place and Hills Like White Elephants were heartbreaking snapshots of life's tiny emotional wounds and scars.

An infinitesimally small number of artists ever achieve such heights and even fewer in the first decade of adulthood. Many things contributed to this sensation that was the young Hemingway.

For one thing, like so many of the most successful rock artists to follow in the decades soon after his death - think of David Bowie, David Byrne and Madonna - he showed an astute ability to absorb valuable lessons from avant garde and experimental artists, outside the mainstream, and yet recognized how to leverage those insights while still appealing to a mass audience. In Hemingway's case, he drew from the work of Ezra Pound, James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, among others, while still crafting stories that captured the spirit of his time.

And capture it, he did. In a manner strikingly resembling the way that rock and roll captured the rebellion and idealism of the educated and materially privileged baby boomers, Hemingway's fiction captured the existential disquiet of the post-WWI lost generation.

Like, though, any artist who has such early meteoric success, replicating it can be a difficult thing to do. Though he had some modest "hits" along the way, it is not unfair to say he never quite reached the same heights literarily again after the early 30s. Probably only For Whom the Bell Tolls approached his early breakthrough works.

Nonetheless, his name never ceased being on the tips of people's tongues and his private life was a source of seemingly endless fascination in the popular press. And Hemingway clearly was aware of this fascination and took no small effort in nurturing it along. He sought out and maintained cordial associations with influential gossip columnists of the time. And his much celebrated exploits in the hunting or fishing of big game never failed to produce photographic fodder for the pages of the era's glossy magazines.

He appeared in commercial advertisements endorsing a number of consumer products. And he regularly submitted letters to literary and other publications in which he primped and primed the well sculpted image of the man's man and the anti-intellectual intellectual.

Many accused Hemingway by the middle of the century of having become a kind of parody of himself. Indeed, one can't help thinking of all the 60s and 70s rock and pop bands, grey and flabby, who continue to rake in the dough on the nostalgia circuit of casinos and community halls.

In Hemingway's case, however, one last triumph was still awaiting. Imagine those hanging-on senior citizen rock bands that, instead, of just endlessly playing the feel good greatest hits, actually had the brashness to insist on playing new material. And, to everyone's amazement, produced yet one more gold record.

Just when almost all critical and even commercial opinion seemed to be on the side that as a writer, Hemingway was over, he struck one more time, with an act of literary accomplishment that some still consider the greatest of his long career. Suddenly, in 1952, with the publication of The Old Man and the Sea, taking the world of letters and literature by storm, Earnest Hemingway was artistically relevant once more. This resurgence in the autumn of his life was soon after rewarded with the Nobel Prize in literature, which finally cemented his legend.

That it was a story of an elderly man, with one last chance at greatness, who sees it slip away between his fingers, never quite really within his grasp, may remind us that his most successful works were those with a vaguely autobiographical flavor - and a sense of inexorable tragedy.

As if adding the finishing touch to that template of the tragic rock star, which he created for subsequent generations, in 1961, in an isolated home, Earnest Hemingway's final chapter came to an end in a suicidal fog of depression and substance abuse. The literary world lost one of its giants and artistic aspiring youth for decades to come inherited the model for tragic artistic genius which would endure throughout the 20th century.

And indeed still does.




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