Explore the discovery of Ernest Hemingway’s long-lost notebooks and his formative years as a starving artist in 1920s Paris, where poverty and passion birthed a literary revolution.

If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Jackson: You know, Eli, I was just thinking about that feeling of finding something you thought was lost forever. Like, imagine you’re at the Hôtel Ritz in Paris in 1956, and the chairman asks if you realize you left a trunk in the basement... thirty years ago.
Eli: Right! And for Ernest Hemingway, that wasn't just a trunk; it was a Louis Vuitton filled with old notebooks from his youth. That discovery is actually what gave us *A Moveable Feast*. It’s this incredibly raw look at his life as a struggling writer in the 1920s.
Jackson: It’s wild because he describes being "very poor and very happy," living in an apartment with no hot water or indoor toilet, yet he’s rubbing elbows with legends like F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein.
Eli: Exactly. He’s nursing a *café crème* in a smoky café, literally inventing a new style of writing while he’s too broke to buy lunch. He actually claimed that hunger was a "good discipline" for his art.
Jackson: So let’s dive into how those hungry years on the streets of Paris shaped one of the most famous voices in literature.