Events & Author Appearances

Oct
06
Hemingway at Eighteen
Steve Paul
The Terrace Inn, 1549 Glendale Ave, Petoskey, MI 49770 (map it)
Friday, October 6, 2017

Steve Paul, author of Hemingway at Eighteen, will be the keynote speaker at the Michigan Hemingway Society's Fall Conference. The event will be held at The Terrace Inn in Petoskey, MI from October 6-8. 

Please call 231-347-2410 or email info@theterraceinn.com to make your reservation at The Terrace Inn for the Michigan Hemingway Society conference. Very reasonable room rates range from $129 to $189 (plus 5% hotel tax.) There is a special discounted rate of $99 for your room on the Thursday night prior to, or the Sunday night following, the conference. 

If you are not a member of the Michigan Hemingway Society for the 2017 calendar year you may join online now and your conference fee will be reduced by $40. Online Conference Registration is now available.

Visit Michigan Hemingway Society's website here for more information.

related book
Hemingway at Eighteen
Hemingway at Eighteen ›
By Steve Paul, Foreword by Paul Hendrickson

Cloth

Published Oct 2017

In the summer of 1917, Ernest Hemingway was an 18-year-old high school graduate unsure of his future. The American entry in the Great War stirred thoughts of joining the army. While many of his friends in Oak Park, Illinois, were heading to college, Hemingway couldn’t make up his mind, and eventually chose to begin a career in writing and journalism at one of the great newspapers of its day, the Kansas City Star. In six and a half months, Hemingway experienced a compressed, streetwise alternative to a college education, which opened his eyes to urban violence, the power of literature, the hard work of writing, and a constantly swirling stage of human comedy and drama. The Kansas City experience led Hemingway into the Red Cross ambulance service in Italy, where, two weeks before his 19th birthday, he was dangerously wounded at the front. Award-winning writer Steve Paul takes a measure of these experiences that transformed Hemingway from a “modest, rather shy and diffident boy” to a young man who was increasingly occupied by recording the truth as he saw it of crime, graft, exotic temptations, violence, and war. Hemingway at Eighteen sheds new light on this young man bound for greatness and a writer at the very beginning of his journey.