Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-8476-8544-8 • Hardback • August 1997 • $24.95 • (£18.99)
Chapter 1 The Battler
Chapter 2 The Sun Also Rises
Chapter 3 A Farewell to Arms
Chapter 4 Death in the Afternoon
Chapter 5 Winner Take Nothing
Leonard Leff has done something new on Hemingway: he has fixed on the professional celebrity, the working author, the publishing enterprise. But in concentrating on the business history of Papa he has done the unexpected—which is to help us recognize anew the uneasy mix of truth and posturing in the work itself.
— David Thomson, author of Rosebud: The Story of Orson Welles
A masterly account of the complex of relationships between a major author and the institution of publishing. Leff's Hemingway is a tragic figure torn between a compelling sense of artistic responsibility and a virtual obsession to reach the broadest audience possible. This book is impeccably researched and well attuned to the inner workings of establishment American literary culture of the 1920s.
— Robert L. Carringer, author of The Making of Citizen Kane
Leff's Hemingway goes beyond other biographical studies to expose how the public figure of Hemingway was created by mass media with the help of and eventually beyond the control of Ernest Heminway. With a cast of players such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Helen Hayes, Sinclair Lewis, David Selznick, and Gary Cooper, the book succeeds in portraying the personal and commercial creation of a tragic public figure in a world of promotion, advertising, and publicity.
— Small Press
Leff's research is obviously able, and he balances aptly what Hemingway so fretted over—he deals with a scholarly subject in a manner easily read and enjoyed.
— Sunday Oklahoman
Leff's emphasis on Hemingway's concern for and problems with fame and fortune makes for a vivid and thoroughly readable discussion of the relationships among all issues. Though not sparing Hemingway for abrasiveness, Leff renders sympathy at significant moments. For comprehensive ]literature collections serving undergraduates and graduates.
— F.L. Ryan, Stonehill College
Hemingway and His Conspirators adds significantly to our understanding of both the profession of authorship and the literary marketplace at a crucial stage in their development in the United States . . . . many cultural historians will find this book of great interest.
— Journal of American History
An absorbing and penetrating look at the inside life of famed author Ernest Hemingway. . . . This book is rich in detail. . . . One of the best.
— Broox Sledge; The Democrat
. . . fascinating . . .
— Entertainment Weekly
The book goes behind the scenes to the various rivalries and editorial sagas, as it gives the inside skinny on reviews, film rights and royalties.
— The Washington Post
A fascinating study of a cultural figure.... Leff provides us with an excellent survey of one of the most famous and infamous cultural figures of this century.
— Joseph Fruscione; American Studies
A fine, lively book...
— New York Review of Books
Hemingway and His Conspirators by Leonard J. Leff explores Hemingway's trajectory into international literary renown as a major celebrity of the 20th century. Leff shows how consciously and savvily young Hemingway built his public persona.Leff deftly explores how Hemingway functioned par excellence as performer and reporter.
— Kiril Stefan Alexander, President of The Boston Book Review; The Boston Book Review
This reviewer deeply hopes that other scholars will develop the new and extensive mine of information so masterfully and conscieentiously uncovered by Leff in this volume.With this book, the first vein of those riches has been adroitly excavated by Leff. What a glorious hole he has quarried and what a rich ore he has brought to the mint.In short, the author has provided a remarkably powerful tool for understanding and interpreting the development and operation of the most visible segment of the book-trade in North America and much of the rest of the developed world.
— Richard Abel, Publishing Consultant; Publishing Research Quarterly /, Winter 1998/99
It was never easy with Ernest Hemingway to separate the artist and the legend. Leonard Leff chronicles in fascinating detail how the later merchandised books for the former but, in the process, damaged the man irreparably.
— Richard Hauer Costa; Magill Book Reviews