In a vibrant study of Paris in the 1920s, Hemingway records his own five years in the French city, describing his creative struggles and sharing portraits of such fellow expatriates as Fitzgerald, Pound, and Stein. Reprint Hemingway records his five years in Paris, describing his own creative struggles and providing portraits of such fellow expatriates as Fitzgerald, Pound, and Stein. Preface
ix(2)
Note
xi
A Good Café on the Place St.-Michel
1(8)
Miss Stein Instructs
9(14)
"Une Génération Perdue"
23(10)
Shakespeare and Company
33(6)
People of the Seine
39(8)
A False Spring
47(12)
The End of an Avocation
59(8)
Hunger Was Good Discipline
67(12)
Ford Madox Ford and the Devil's Disciple
79(10)
Birth of a New School
89(8)
With Pascin at the Dôme
97(8)
Ezra Pound and His Bel Esprit
105(10)
A Strange Enough Ending
115(6)
The Man Who Was Marked for Death
121(10)
Evan Shipman at the Lilas
131(10)
An Agent of Evil
141(6)
Scott Fitzgerald
147(30)
Hawks Do Not Share
177(10)
A Matter of Measurements
187(8)
There Is Never Any End to Paris
195