The Paris Wife…book review

The Paris Wife…book review

aspirations, vagrant needs…

 

 

Book review:

The Paris Wife

 

by Paula McLain

New York: Ballantine Books, 2011

320 pages

 

Paula McLain has done it artfully. The Paris Wife is a richly nuanced account of the transformation of the 1921 marriage of Hadley Richardson and Ernest Hemingway, the first for each of them.

I had not known in detail that Hemingway was as much of an inconstant lover as he actually was.

Now I know that Paula McLain tells me as much as I need to know about the life-interrupting aspirations of Hadley, and more than I care to know about the destructive potency of Hemingway’s vagrant needs.

Excerpt (Hadley is speaking):

“[Ernest] needed me to make him feel safe…yes, the same way I needed him. But he also liked that he could disappear into his work, away from me. And return when he wanted to.”

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2024 All rights reserved.

 

Remember the Tallahatchie Bridge?

Molly Johnson sings it right…

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Seeing far: Selected poems with 47 free verse and haiku poems,
and the rest of my poetry books are for sale on Amazon (paperback and Kindle)
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