One True Podcast - podcast cover

One True Podcast

Mark Cirino and Michael Von Cannonwww.hemingwaysociety.org

One True Podcast explores all things related to Hemingway, his work, and his world. The show is hosted by Mark Cirino and produced by Michael Von Cannon. Join us in conversation with scholars, artists, political leaders, and other luminaries. For more, follow us on Twitter @1truepod. You can also email us at 1truepod@gmail.com.

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Episodes

Jerry Fielder and Anne E. Havinga on the Karsh Photograph

On this episode, we welcome to the show Jerry Fielder and Anne E. Havinga to discuss Yousuf Karsh's portrait of Hemingway, which is without a doubt the most iconic image of the writer. Who was Karsh? What was the meeting like between him and Hemingway? Why does this photo, among all those taken of Hemingway (including the others Karsh took), hold such an important place? Our two guests are especially suited to respond to these and other questions. Fielder joins us as the Director of the Estate o...

May 05, 202047 min

Andrew Farah on Hemingway's Brain

On this episode of One True Podcast, we are joined by Dr. Andrew Farah, author of Hemingway’s Brain , who argues that Hemingway was misdiagnosed and suffered from dementia in his later years. With a perspective and base of knowledge no other commentator has ever offered, Dr. Farah chronicles Hemingway’s lifetime of mental illness, addiction, and accidents, identifying how a 21st-century doctor would have had the technology and the medicine to rehabilitate Hemingway. This episode was recorded on ...

Apr 13, 202049 min

Lesley Blume on The Sun Also Rises

Lesley Blume joins One True Podcast to discuss Everybody Behaves Badly , her bestselling profile of the background of The Sun Also Rises . Blume talks about Paris and Pamplona in the 1920s, the actual people who inspired Hemingway’s unforgettable characters, and the impact the novel has had on literature and culture for almost a century. Join us for a lively conversation with the award-winning journalist and enjoy our re-examination of Hemingway’s masterpiece! This episode was recorded on March ...

Mar 23, 202046 min

Ambassador Jeffrey DeLaurentis on Cuba

One True Podcast continues its exploration of the places that defined Hemingway and that Hemingway helped define. We return to Cuba, joined by Jeffrey DeLaurentis, the man President Obama nominated to serve as ambassador to Cuba. During the discussion, Ambassador DeLaurentis draws from his personal experiences with the Cuban government and Cuban citizens, as well as his decades of international experience, in order to provide a rich analysis of the state of this complex international relationshi...

Mar 02, 202034 min

Scott Donaldson on the Iceberg Theory

On this episode we welcome Scott Donaldson, the legendary Hemingway biographer, to discuss the iceberg principle of writing. He explores the function of Hemingway’s iceberg style, examines various examples of it at work, and considers potential influences on Hemingway's "trademark" style of omission. As a literary biographer and one of the most perceptive and prolific living scholars of American literature, Donaldson illuminates Hemingway and his artistic technique. This episode was recorded on ...

Feb 11, 202054 min

Mark Thompson on the Italian Front of WWI

In this episode, the brilliant historian Mark Thompson, author of the magisterial The White War , separates fact from fiction as he analyzes Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms , including its epic depiction of the devastating Caporetto retreat. In writing his great war novel, Hemingway dramatically recreated the Italian Front of World War I by consulting histories, maps, novels, and others’ firsthand accounts. He also drew from his own traumatic experiences in northern Italy in 1918. Thompson turns ...

Jan 20, 202049 min

Marc Dudley on Race

One True Podcast took the occasion of Toni Morrison’s death to consider the way race emerges as a key factor in Hemingway’s writing. In this episode, we turn to one of the most prominent Hemingway scholars on this issue, North Carolina State’s Marc Dudley. During the interview, Dudley reflects on Morrison’s searing criticisms of Hemingway’s treatment of minority characters, and extends his thoughts to consider how other ethnicities – such as Native Americans – function in Hemingway’s work. Hemin...

Dec 26, 201951 min

Scholar's Spotlight: Susan Beegel on the Maine Marlin

In this episode, the inimitable Susan Beegel joins producer Michael Von Cannon for a special "Scholar's Spotlight" episode. Beegel tells Michael about her article "Fish Tale: A History of the L.C. Bates Museum Marlin, Taxidermist Fred C.N. Parke, and Ernest Hemingway," which appeared in the Fall 2018 issue of the Hemingway Review . Listen in as she unlocks the mysteries surrounding a taxidermied Hemingway marlin that she came across in a museum in Hinckley, Maine. As Beegel explores the intertwi...

Dec 17, 201937 min

Stacy Keach on Playing Hemingway

Stacy Keach joins the show to reflect on his legendary career, particularly his portrayal of Hemingway on the stage, in the classic miniseries, and in his audio recording of short stories. Keach compares the art of acting to the act of writing and gets to the heart of Hemingway’s knack for conveying emotion in spare prose. He reflects on the many adaptations of Hemingway novels and his friendship with George C. Scott and John Huston. He also offers insights into Hemingway’s psychology and destru...

Oct 21, 201942 min

Alex Vernon on War

Alex Vernon joins the show to discuss one of Hemingway’s major themes: men at war. He penetrates the myth of Hemingway-as-warmonger, isolates some of the writer's most evocative war passages, and even reflects on his own war experiences in the Middle East. Vernon also tracks Hemingway’s development from the young eyewitness of World War I to the keen partisan of the Spanish Civil War, and finally to the solemn commentator of WWII journalism. In pursuit of Hemingway’s place in the canon of war li...

Oct 01, 201948 min

Julia Sweig on Cuba

This episode is a journey into the culture and history of Cuba. Given the undeniable importance of Cuba in Hemingway’s life and legacy, Hemingway readers will learn a lot more about it from one of the preeminent scholars, thinkers, and writers on Cuba, Dr. Julia E. Sweig. Dr. Sweig discusses US-Cuba relations, their tumultuous history, her meetings with Fidel Castro, and her sense of what we might expect--and hope for--in the coming years. The interview touches on issues of immigration, terroris...

Sep 10, 201944 min

James McGrath Morris on John Dos Passos

In this episode, we explore Hemingway and John Dos Passos, their service in the American Red Cross during World War I, their writing careers, and their doomed friendship. In order to do so, we chat with the man who wrote the book on it. James McGrath Morris’s The Ambulance Drivers chronicles the highs and lows of their relationship and their legacies. As well, Morris talks about the mystery surrounding the identity of the Italian soldier who saved the young Hemingway’s life. This episode was rec...

Aug 20, 201945 min

Kirk Curnutt on F. Scott Fitzgerald

Today's show places Ernest Hemingway alongside one of his artistic contemporaries: F. Scott Fitzgerald. Part friendship and part rivalry, their complex relationship has all the twists and turns of a good novel about two characters that, at least on the surface, seem vastly different. There's some truth to these differences but, like a good story, there's a fair share of fiction. We sit down with Kirk Curnutt to set the record straight. During the episode, we draw the distinction between myth and...

Jul 26, 20191 hr 2 min
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