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  1. Patrick Miller Hemingway (born June 28, 1928) is an American wildlife manager and writer who is novelist Ernest Hemingway 's second son, and the first born to Hemingway's second wife Pauline Pfeiffer. [1]

  2. Patrick Miller Hemingway (born June 28, 1928) is an American wildlife manager and writer who is novelist Ernest Hemingway 's second son, and the first born to Hemingway's second wife Pauline Pfeiffer.

  3. Jan 20, 2012 · Watch Sandra Spanier speak with Ernest Hemingway's son Patrick about the new picture of his iconic father that emerges in THE LETTERS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY, VOLUME I.

  4. So begins a 1968 article written by Patrick Hemingway, recounting his earliest recollection of his father. One of the treasures of the Kennedy Library is the Hemingway Collection, the world’s principal center for research on the life and works of the Nobel Prize winning author.

  5. Jun 28, 2008 · Patrick Hemingway, son of famed writer Ernest Hemingway, celebrates his 80th on Saturday. He talks with Scott Simon about his life and his memories of his father.

  6. THE LETTERS OF ERNEST HEMINGWAY, VOLUME I editor Sandra Spanier is joined by Frick Weber in Part II of this mini interview with Ernest Hemingway's son Patrick.

  7. Patrick was a White Hunter and a big-game guide, taking European princes, wealthy adventurers, and curious tourists on hunting expeditions in the bush. During dangerous political times, he served as honorary game warden for the nations of Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania.

  8. Jun 19, 2022 · There’s a question that Patrick Hemingway has been asked repeatedly by family and strangers alike: Did he truly know his famous father, Ernest Hemingway? “I knew him as a person, quite...

  9. Jun 14, 2022 · Known for his larger-than-life personality and his passions for bullfighting, fishing, and big-game hunting, he died in Ketchum, Idaho on July 2, 1961. Patrick Hemingway is the middle child of Ernest’s three sons.

  10. Jul 16, 2022 · It is not in Patrick’s letters, but the strangeness of that tribe came out in Ernest’s posthumous novel, The Garden of Eden, where the classic and increasingly tiresome Hemingway hero was contradicted by a new hero thrilled by androgyny and moving far beyond traditional love-making.