Martha Gellhorn (1908–1998)
Autor de Travels with Myself and Another: A Memoir
Sobre El Autor
Martha Gellhorn, one of America's most important war correspondents, was the author of thirteen books of fiction and nonfiction and the third wife of Ernest Hemingway. Her reporting career spanned several decades: she covered conflicts from the Spanish Civil War to World War II to Vietnam. Gellhorn mostrar más died in 1998 at age eighty-nine mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: Ernest Hemingway Photograph Collection, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
(cropped)
(jfklibrary.org)
Obras de Martha Gellhorn
The Heart of Another 2 copias
What mad pursuit 1 copia
The Arabs of Palestine 1 copia
Echte vrouwen reizen anders 1 copia
Three Novellas 1 copia
Cuba Revisited 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Take My Advice: Letters to the Next Generation from People Who Know a Thing or Two (2002) — Contribuidor — 44 copias
Bad trips : de ergste reisverhalen van Bruce Chatwin, Martha Gellhorn, Reinhold Messner, Eric Newby, Redmond O'Hanlon (2000) — Contribuidor — 14 copias
Best-in-Books: Tall Ships / Short Summer / Christmas with Robert E. Lee / Two by Two (1958) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Nombre canónico
- Gellhorn, Martha
- Nombre legal
- Gellhorn, Martha Ellis (birth)
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1908-11-08
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 1998-02-15
- Género
- female
- Nacionalidad
- USA
- Lugar de nacimiento
- St Louis, Missouri, USA
- Lugar de fallecimiento
- London, England, UK
- Causa de fallecimiento
- suicide
- Lugares de residencia
- St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Paris, France
London, England, UK - Educación
- Bryn Mawr College
- Ocupaciones
- journalist
war correspondent
Investigator, FERA
novelist
memoirist
short story writer - Relaciones
- Hemingway, Ernest (husband|divorced)
Cowles, Virginia (co-author)
Jouvenel, Bertrand de (lover)
Pilger, John (friend) - Organizaciones
- The Atlantic Monthly
Collier's
St. Louis Post-Dispatch - Biografía breve
- Martha Gellhorn's parents were a physician and an advocate for women's right to vote. She attended a progressive private school her parents founded in St. Louis, then went to Bryn Mawr College, leaving in 1927 to write for The New Republic. She then got a job as a crime reporter in Albany, New York. In 1930, she went to Europe, paying for the boat trip by writing a brochure for the Holland American Line. In Paris, she met French writer Bertrand de Jouvenel, whom she may have married. She returned with him to St. Louis and then traveled the American Southwest as a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Her first novel, What Mad Pursuit (1934), attracted the attention of Harry Hopkins, a close advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who hired Gellhorn to travel the USA as a field investigator for the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) and write about the effects of the Great Depression. The resulting work, The Trouble I've Seen (1936), is now one of her most famous. Gellhorn met Ernest Hemingway, whose writing she admired, in Key West, Florida, in 1936. When he told her he was going to Spain to cover the Civil War there, she decided to go, too. She arrived in Madrid in 1937 on assignment for Collier's Weekly. The couple soon became lovers and married in 1940. She took Hemingway along with her to China to cover the Chinese Army's retreat from the Japanese invasion. During World War II, she covered the Soviet attack on Finland, the German Blitz attacks on London, and the Allied D-Day invasion of Europe. "She wrote passionately about the dreadful impact of war on the innocent," the Washington Post said in her obituary. She witnessed the Allied liberation of the concentration camp at Dachau, and her article became one of the most famous accounts of the discovery of the camps. After the war, Gellhorn divorced Hemingway and lived in several countries, from France and Italy to Cuba, Mexico, and Kenya, before settling in the UK. She covered the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, and the conflicts in Vietnam, Panama, and El Salvador. She also wrote more fiction, including The Honeyed Peace (1953) and Two by Two (1958). Her novellas were popular, and were published in collections including The Weather in Africa (1988) and The Novellas of Martha Gellhorn (1993). Her memoir Travels With Myself and Another, was published in 1978. In 1953 she married her third husband, T.S. Matthews, a former managing editor at Time Magazine. She gave birth to one son, George Alexander Gellhorn, whom she raised herself, and adopted a son from an Italian orphanage. She died by suicide at age 89. Her selected letters were published posthumously in 2006.
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Premios
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Estadísticas
- Obras
- 32
- También por
- 24
- Miembros
- 1,678
- Popularidad
- #15,319
- Valoración
- 4.0
- Reseñas
- 31
- ISBNs
- 108
- Idiomas
- 8
- Favorito
- 6
Agrupa varios relatos: el viaje por una China en guerra en compañía de Ernest Hemingway—con quien estuvo casada durante cinco años—, otra errática singladura por el Caribe en busca de submarinos alemanes, su travesía de África de Oeste a Este, y una cata de la Rusia soviética.
Como antídoto contra el desaliento, el libro funciona a la perfección: nada mejor para la autoestima que la supervivencia, afirma Martha Gellhorn. Además, aun de los viajes más adversos se regresa con jugosas recompensas, y no hay que perder la esperanza: el próximo destino puede resultar todavía peor.… (más)