Literary Love Triangle: The Making of Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises
Ernest Hemingway was busy in 1926. He’d just written his first novel, The Sun Also Rises, based
on a trip to Spain he’d taken the year before. His new pal F. Scott
Fitzgerald loved it, and was working on getting it published by
Scribner’s, the same house that had published Fitzgerald’s breakout
work, The Great Gatsby. But
Fitzgerald wanted Hemingway to cut the opening of the book, which would
produce a major shift in tone. Fitzgerald had to broach this subject
lightly, as Hemingway took criticism like a spoiled six-year-old.
First chapter aside, they also had to
figure out how to get Hemingway out of a previous commitment he’d made
to another publisher. They managed to do this by offering them a
mean-spirited satirical novel called The Torrents of Spring
which they knew would be rejected, thus freeing Hemingway to seek
publication elsewhere. Scribner’s was willing to buy the satirical novel
just so they could get Sun. Hemingway
vacationed with his wife and little son in Schruns, Austria, then went
to New York to sign with Scribner’s. On his way back to Austria, he
stopped off in Paris to see Pauline Pfeiffer, with whom he was having an
affair. He may or may not have fallen in love with Pauline because she
might have been the only one who thought Torrents of Spring was any good.
As Mary V. Dearborn tells it in her
new biography of Hemingway, the affair with Pfeiffer was no casual
thing. Hemingway’s gotten a reputation as a womanizer because it seems
to fit the image of him as a macho, swaggering, marlin-catching,
rhino-shooting man’s man. In fact, Hemingway was tortured by his love
for Pauline, and wanted desperately to figure things out. Not that he
had a mature way of working through it: when his wife Hadley confronted
him about it, he flew into a rage, blaming her for even bringing it up.
Today being Hemingway’s birthday,
I’ve been reading Dearborn’s book and found the events around the time
of the writing and publication of The Sun Also Rises ripe
for a graphic interpretation. I don’t know if Hemingway liked comics,
but fans can consider this a posthumous birthday gift for Papa, who was
born today in 1899.
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