Cuba Giving Copies of Hemingway Documents to Kennedy Library
The Kennedy Library in Boston will be getting copies of a number of Ernest Hemingway's papers from the government of Cuba.
The Boston Globe reported that Cuba's Ministry of Culture had given the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum copies of 3,000 letters and documents Hemingway amassed during his years in Cuba, from 1939 to 1960. Among the documents are corrected proofs of "The Old Man and the Sea" and an alternate ending to "For Whom the Bell Tolls" (The Globe report did not say what that ending was), as well as correspondence with Robert Capa, Marlene Dietrich, Sinclair Lewis, Lillian Ross, Ingrid Bergman and various members of his family. The library is already home to the Hemingway Archive and the Hemingway Room, which was dedicated in 1980, and includes relics like a lion-skin throw rug, journals of his fishing trips and shrapnel from wounds he suffered during World War I.
Copies are better than nothing at all, but you just know they wish they could get their hands on the originals. But those aren't leaving Cuba anytime soon.
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