The Hemingway Hoax

The Hemingway Hoax

"The Hemingway Hoax" is a short novel by science fiction writer Joe Haldeman. It weaves together a story of an attempt to produce a fake Ernest Hemingway manuscript with themes concerning time travel and parallel worlds. A shorter version of the book won both a Hugo award and a Nebula award (tied with "Weatherman" by Lois McMaster Bujold) for best novella in 1991 (for stories in 1990).

Plot summary

In 1921 Hemingway's writing career suffered a setback when his first wife, Hadley, lost a bag containing the manuscript and all the carbon copies of his first novel on a Parisian train. Since that time there has been speculation about the nature of the novel and whether the manuscript survived and may turn up one day.

Seventy-five years later in 1996, John Baird, a Hemingway scholar (and possessed of a completely eidetic memory), is persuaded by Sylvester "Castle" Castlemaine, a grifter in Key West, to create a fake manuscript to be passed off as one of the lost copies. Initially reluctant, he goes along with this because, with some legal trickery, it may be possible to do it without attracting the attention of the authorities.

However, instead he attracts attention from an altogether different quarter. Somewhere, or somewhen, there are entities who control the paths of destiny in the multiple parallel versions of our world that exist. Anything that affects the cultural influence of Hemingway is a threat to them. We eventually learn that many of the timelines are supposed to end in 2006 with a catastrophic nuclear war when two "macho" superpower leaders, both influenced by Hemingway's stories, refuse to back down in a crisis. If even a few timelines fail to reach this point, then the reverberations across the "Omniverse" will be fatal.

We follow Baird as he carries out research in the Hemingway collection at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, and attempts to get aged paper and the exact model of typewriter that Hemingway used. He gets three surprises. First, Hemingway appears to him on a train back from Boston to Florida, and warns him to give up on the scheme. Second, the Hemingway, as he comes to call it, kills him by inducing a massive stroke when he refuses. Third, he wakes up on the same train - or is it the same? He is slightly different himself, with two sets of similar but conflicting memories.

The Hemingway entity is surprised as well. Humans are supposed to stay dead. Instead this one shifted to a parallel timeline.

Back in Florida, life continues roughly as before. Castle brings in a seductress to bedazzle the scholar even as he has an affair with his wife Lena. Here the themes of the novel begin to parallel those of Hemingway's own stories. Through multiple encounters with the Heminqway entity, and multiple deaths, Baird stays with the scheme, as much to defy this mysterious tormentor as anything else. Each new world, however, seems a little worse than the last, especially when it comes to Castle's personality. In the final universe, Castle is a psychotic killer whom they attempt to have arrested on an out-of-state warrant.

The Hemingway entity comes to Baird and offers to show him what happened to Hadley's bag, in exchange for giving up on the hoax. Travelling back in time, they see the thief - it is Hemingway himself, but he speaks to Baird and the entity before vanishing.

Without knowing how, Baird finds himself back in his own time, with the bag. At that point Castle, having escaped arrest, violently kills all his co-conspirators with shotgun blasts. The scholar's awareness persists, and he is able to reverse the flow of time and rearrange events so that the women survive, even as he shoots the grifter and takes a shotgun blast in the mouth, imitating the real Hemingway's suicide.

Now, freed from his body Baird has become like the entity that pursued him. He experiences Hemingway's memories, backwards from the end. Reaching the point where the young Hemingway, devastated and enraged by the loss of the manuscripts, crystallizes his masculine outlook and turns to face his future, Baird's awareness separates and comes to consciousness of his abilities. He moves back in time, steals Hadley's bag, allowing himself to be seen doing it in the person of Hemingway. He drops it off for himself to find in the present, before abandoning time for the spaces between. Thus the "Baird entity" creates himself out of Hemingway's psychic trauma, and it is implied that he actually creates all the other entities we have encountered in the story.

The novel ends with Hemingway writing the short story "Up in Michigan" in Paris in the 1920's, and suddenly experiencing an odd premonition of doom.

Citations

External links

*isfdb title|id=41326|title=The Hemingway Hoax
*IBList |type=book|id=17911|name=The Hemingway Hoax


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • The New Hugo Winners — was a series of books which collected science fiction and fantasy stories which had recently won a Hugo Award for Short Story, Novelette or Novella. It ran for four volumes, published in 1989, 1992, 1994, and 1997, together collecting stories… …   Wikipedia

  • The Man Who Sold the Moon — Cover of Shasta edition collection The Man Who Sold the Moon is a science fiction novella by Robert A. Heinlein written in 1949 and published in 1950. A part of his Future History and prequel to Requiem , it covers events around a fictional first …   Wikipedia

  • The War of the Simpsons — Infobox Simpsons episode episode name = The War of the Simpsons image caption = Homer decides not to catch General Sherman, to prove his love for Marge episode no = 33 prod code = 7F20 airdate = May 2, 1991 show runner = James L. Brooks Matt… …   Wikipedia

  • Down in the Bottomlands — is a novella written by Harry Turtledove. It takes place in an alternative history in which the Atlantic Ocean did not reflood the Mediterranean Sea 5.5 million years ago in the Miocene Epoch, as it did in our history. The Mediterranean Basin… …   Wikipedia

  • List of joint winners of the Hugo and Nebula awards — This is a list of the works that have won both the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award, awarded annually to works of science fiction literature.Novel*1966/1965 Novel: Dune by Frank Herbert *1970/1969 Novel: The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le… …   Wikipedia

  • The Paris Review — Infobox Magazine title = The Paris Review image size = 230px image caption = Cover of the Summer 1955 issue editor = Philip Gourevitch editor title = Editors staff writer = frequency = Quarterly circulation = category = Literary magazine company …   Wikipedia

  • Vorkosigan Saga — The Vorkosigan Saga is a series of science fiction novels and short stories set in a common fictional universe by American author Lois McMaster Bujold.[1] Most of these were published between 1986 and 2002, with the exceptions being “Winterfair… …   Wikipedia

  • 49th World Science Fiction Convention — The 49th World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon), also known as Chicon V, was held August 29–September 2, 1991, at the Hyatt Regency Chicago in Chicago, Illinois, USA.[1][2] The chairman was Kathleen Meyer. The Guests of Honor were Hal… …   Wikipedia

  • Joe Haldeman — Infobox Writer name=Joe Haldeman caption=Joe Haldeman at Finncon 2007 in Jyväskylä, Finland. pseudonym = birthdate = birth date and age|1943|6|9 birthplace = Oklahoma City, Okla. occupation = Novelist genre = Science fiction movement = Military… …   Wikipedia

  • Холдеман, Джо — Джо Холдеман Joe Haldeman …   Википедия

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”