AUDIOBOOK

About
Before finding celebrity as an author, including his 1954 Nobel Prize, Ernest M. Hemingway honed his craft as a journeyman reporter. In the spring of 1923, as a special correspondent for the Toronto Star, he travelled to the occupied Ruhr Valley where he produced a series of 10 articles, collected here as Dispatches from the Ruhr. In them, he explores the French political system and its role in the decision to occupy the Ruhr Valley militarily, in an effort to collect on unsustainable war reparations. In addition, he examines the suffering of its ordinary citizens, as conditions there led to a progressive loss of confidence in the Wiemar Republic; its economic collapse under the weight of hyper-inflation; and, ultimately, to the rise of Nazism. It is worth reading as both a case study on the unintended consequences of military occupation and a master class in the development of Hemingway's characteristic prose style.
Related Subjects
Artists
Similar Artists
Alan Kaufman
Beryl Markham
Bonnie Jo Campbell
David Downie
David James Duncan
Donald L. Miller
Gertrude Stein
Graham Robb
John Fowles
John Irving
John Updike
Joseph Heller
Kaye Gibbons
Laura Kasischke
Naomi Wood
Noel Riley Fitch
Norman Maclean
Pauline Gedge
Raymond Carver
Robertson Davies
Saul Bellow
Sherwood Anderson
Stephen Clarke
Yann Martel