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Rare Hemingway manuscripts at JFK library

By BOB SALSBERG, Associated Press
Published: April 17, 2016, 5:01am

BOSTON — Ernest Hemingway penned 47 possible endings to “A Farewell to Arms,” eight of which are on display at a new exhibition on the famed American writer at the John F. Kennedy presidential library — along with the one that actually concluded the classic World War I novel.

“If a person wants to make their mark as a writer they have to work very hard, and this exhibit really shows how hard he worked,” said Patrick Hemingway, 87, the author’s only surviving child who on Tuesday toured the exhibition that opened Monday in Boston and runs through Dec. 31.

The Kennedy library, which opened in 1979, is a repository for the world’s largest collection of documents, photographs and personal mementos belonging to the literary icon. The collection is one of the library’s “greatest treasures,” said curator Stacey Bredhoff.

“Ernest Hemingway: Between Two Wars,” includes material rarely displayed in public.

Hemingway and Kennedy never met, but the late president was clearly an admirer. Kennedy wrote Hemingway for permission to use his oft-quoted phrase “grace under pressure” in the opening to Kennedy’s own “Profiles in Courage.” Hemingway was too ill to accept an invitation to JFK’s January 1961 inauguration, and would commit suicide later that year.

Along with the multiple proposed endings to “A Farewell to Arms,” highlights of the exhibit include Hemingway’s first short story, published in 1917 in a high school literary magazine; a draft of his first Nick Adams story, written on Red Cross stationery at an Italian hospital where Hemingway was recovering from wounds suffered while serving as an ambulance driver during World War I; correspondence with other literary figures from his time as a member of the so-called “lost generation” in Paris; and ticket stubs from some of the many bullfights he attended.

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