

Especially after reading A Farewell to Arms, Hemingway's influence is easy to discern in an enormous number of the writers who have followed him. If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then he was a great writer indeed. Hemingway achieved more than celebrity, however. Like those of Shakespeare and Einstein, Hemingway's face is recognized by millions who have never read a word he wrote. The publication of recovered fragments from the writer's unpublished oeuvre has never failed to make headlines worldwide, from A Moveable Feast in 1964 to the so-called "fictional memoir" True at First Light, in 1999. Striking evidence of this is the 1958 movie of The Old Man and the Sea it's hard to imagine a book less suited to the big screen, and yet Hemingway's celebrity at the time of its publication was so massive that Hollywood had virtually no choice but to film the novella.

With the publication of A Farewell to Arms in 1929, he achieved widespread fame, and despite a steady decline in the quality of his work thereafter, his fame continued to grow until his suicide in 1961 and beyond.

