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Sign In Not a Subscriber?Join NowWith America about to celebrate the 100th birthday of its larger-than-life literary son Ernest Hemingway, ALANE SALIERNO MASON discovered in an old steamer trunk a cache of letters and telegrams from the writer to her adoptive grandmother, a celebrated, well-married beauty named Jane Kendall Mason. They gave new insights into a liaison that blossomed amid the decadent delights of 1930s Havana, enraged and enchanted Hemingway, haunted his work, and destroyed his relationship with his editor Arnold Gingrich, the founder of Esquire, who eventually became the fourth husband of the dashing, complicated, and tragic "Mrs. M."
July 1999 Alane Salierno MasonWith America about to celebrate the 100th birthday of its larger-than-life literary son Ernest Hemingway, ALANE SALIERNO MASON discovered in an old steamer trunk a cache of letters and telegrams from the writer to her adoptive grandmother, a celebrated, well-married beauty named Jane Kendall Mason. They gave new insights into a liaison that blossomed amid the decadent delights of 1930s Havana, enraged and enchanted Hemingway, haunted his work, and destroyed his relationship with his editor Arnold Gingrich, the founder of Esquire, who eventually became the fourth husband of the dashing, complicated, and tragic "Mrs. M."
July 1999 Alane Salierno MasonSubscribers have complete access to the archive.
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