The most influential writer of his time, Ernest Hemingway was considered one of the prominent figures of the Lost Generation literary movement. His background and journalism contributed to his unique style of writing from which he became known for. Hemingway’s life experiences became his source for all that he wrote about. His passion for nature, and his adventurous personality are reflected on his unique works. Hemingway had a particular way of looking at life and his childhood experiences, including his escapes, enriched his creativity which later inspire him to pursue a career as a writer. He began as a successful athlete who then turned into a journalist, and finally discovered his love for writing stories. The most …show more content…
In Europe, Hemingway became a reporter and covered events all over which included interviews with important leaders such as Lloyd George, Clemenceau, and Mussolini. It was during his first stay in Europe where he found inspiration to write the memoir A Moveable Feast. In it, he talks about his many experiences while living in Paris during the 1920s, a period of time when the city was haven for american expatriate artists and writers also known as The Lost Generation. During the next four years, Hemingway published various novels and short stories such as “Hills Like White Elephants,” and “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber.” In like manner, he wrote The Sun Also Rises in 1926, and For Whom the Bell Tolls in 1940. The Encyclopedia, Issues and Controversies also informs us that Hemingway returned to Toronto and went back to work for The Kansas City Star in August 1923. It was at this time when his writing slowed down due to his journalistic work for The Star. Finally, after reading Joyce’s Dubliners, Hemingway began to take a different route and focus once again into writing stories. In 1927, he faced a divorce from his wife Hadley Richardson and later re-married a …show more content…
Hemingway encountered probably his most difficult year in 1928, as it brought both joy and sorrow to his life. On the bright side, he published A Farewell to Arms, and on the down side he entered a state of depression as his fathered committed suicide after suffering from hypertension and diabetes. It was through Hemingway’s experience of lost which inspired him to write the novel For Whom the Bell Tolls. It was through his extensive travel in pursuit of hunting, along with his experiences with war and death that provided him with a great amount of ideas and material for his work. More over, in 1937, Hemingway traveled to Spain as a war correspondent. Soon after, in 1940 he divorced Pauline Pfieffer and married Martha Gelhorn who was also a writer. Together, they toured China before settling in Cuba. A year after It was during WWII when Hemingway volunteered his fishing boat to serve the U.S. Navy as a submarine spotter. Following this further, he traveled once again through Europe, but this time as a war correspondent. A year after his marriage, Hemingway once again divorced and married Mary