Thinking of Ernest Hemingway often brings to mind his travels around the world, documenting war and engaging in thrilling ad- ventures. However, fully understanding this outsized international author means returning to his place of birth. Hidden Hemingway presents highlights from the extraordinary collection of the Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park. Thoroughly researched, and illustrated with more than 300 color images, this impressive volume includes never-before-published photos; letters between Heming- way and Agnes Von Kurowsky, his World War I love; bullfighting memorabilia; high school assignments; adolescent diaries; Heming- way’s earliest published work, such as the “Class Prophecy” that appeared in his high school yearbook; and even a dental X-ray. Hidden Hemingway also includes one of the final letters Hemingway wrote, as he was undergoing electroshock treatment at the Mayo Clinic. These documents, photographs, and ephemera trace the trajectory of the life of an American literary legend. The items showcased in Hidden Hemingway are more than stagedressing for a literary life, more than marginalia. They provide definition―and, in some cases, documentation―of Hemingway’s ambition, heartbreak, literary triumphs and trials, and joys and tragedies. It’s Hemingway’s stature as a Pulitzer Prize– and Nobel Prize–winning author that draws so many biographers and historians to his work. It is also the wealth of material he left behind that makes him such a compelling, engaging, and often polarizing figure. For Hemingway, the material he saved was both autobiography and research. He gathered data and details that made the life lived in his books more authentic. The authors of Hidden Hemingway have done the same, telling a life story through items that illuminate Hemingway’s legacy. Some of the material contradicts the public image that Hemingway built for himself, and some supports his larger-than-life myth. In all, Hidden Hemingway celebrates the Ernest Hemingway archives and Oak Park’s most famous author.
Hidden Hemingway is a fascinating look at a fascinating man. It focuses on his ties to Oak Park, Illinois, and goes on to give snippets of the rest of his life after moving to Paris in the 1920s. It's a great primer for a newcomer to the Hemingway world: We get his family tree, his school spelling tests, his high school yearbook photos, his newspaper articles. Really, really well done piece of work here.
The Oak Park Foundation is responsible for opening their archives to make this book possible. Many items have not been photographed or shown before. It's a picture book with explanations of archival materials-Hemingway's homes, family photos, letters, news clippings-providing minute details of his life and works. There is too much detail for me (one example is an x-ray of his tooth taken in Paris in 1936), but Hemingway researchers and admirers will appreciate it.