Hemingway's Not-So-Private Idaho

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"He almost never wrote about it but, for the last 20 years of his life, Ernest Hemingway made his home in the rugged Idaho mountain town of Ketchum in a 1950s-era house made of poured concrete and painted to make it look like wood." Leonard Doyle writes about the local controversies surrounding attempts to open the scene of Hemingway's death to the hoi polloi. In the U.K.'s The Independent.

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Gotta love Hemingway.

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Marshall Cutchin published on September 26, 2007 7:21 AM.

Writer vs. Wild in Costa Rica was the previous entry in this blog.

National Fly Fishing Championships Return to Colorado Next Week is the next entry in this blog.

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