John Beall taught at Collegiate School in New York City for thirty years. An independent scholar, he has published essays in the James Joyce Quarterly, Hemingway Review, MidAmerica, and Paideuma.
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Description
John Beall's dazzling contribution to Hemingway scholarship is the first full-length study based on all extant archival material. It provides crucial insights into Hemingway's process of creation from initial fragments and ideas, through the development and continual revisions, to the final versions of the stories. Thoroughly original and persuasive, this is a must-read for anyone interested in Hemingway or the writing of fiction." - Robert Paul Lamb, author of Art Matters: Hemingway, Craft, and the Creation of the Modern Short Story "Beall's thoughtful, probing inquiries into Hemingway's short fiction examine these narratives not as fixed artifacts but rather as fluid texts that variously evolved through multiple drafts. This archival approach explodes the popular illusions of spontaneous artistry and confident style to reveal the nagging uncertainties that compelled the author to revise obsessively." - J. Gerald Kennedy, editor of the Norton Critical Edition of In Our Time

