Ernest Hemingway always had cats as companions, from the ones he adored as a child in Illinois and Michigan, to the more than 30 he had as an adult in Paris, Key West, Cuba, and Idaho.
He sought the cats\' comfort in times of stress and loneliness, and he featured some of them in his writings, particularly in A Moveable Feast , Islands in the Stream , The Garden of Eden , and True at First Light --all written late in his life and as close to autobiography as he ever came..
Hemingway\'s Cats reveals a softer side to the writer\'s character than is usually portrayed through the macho image of the hunter and fisherman.
In this updated and edition, you\'ll also meet his nine dogs, a cow, and a young great horned owl that he rescued not long before his death.
Puss, Fatso, Friendless, Feather Kitty, Princessa, Furhouse, Uncle Woofer, and his last cat in Idaho, Big Boy Peterson.
He gave each a name that suited its character, including F.
He called the cats purr factories and love sponges who soaked up love in return for comfort and companionship.
The place is so damned big it doesn\'t really seem as though there were many cats until you see them all moving like a mass migration at feeding time.
In 1943, Ernest Hemingway, living in the Finca in Cuba with his third wife and eleven cats, wrote to his first wife: One cat just leads to another...
All are chronicled and most are pictured here, along with revelations about how they fit into the many twists and turns of his life and loves.
Ernest Hemingway always had cats as companions, from the ones he adored as a child in Illinois and Michigan, to the more than 30 he had as an adult in Paris, Key West, Cuba, and Idaho