Hemingway Days Events to Salute Key West’s Literary Tradition
KEY WEST, Florida Keys — Ernest Hemingway left Key West in late 1939 after nearly a decade of residence, but his literary legacy can be celebrated during Hemingway Days 2024, scheduled Tuesday through Sunday, July 16-21.
On its opening and closing days, the festival spotlights a unique exhibit at the Key West Museum of Art & History, 281 Front St., that commemorates the author’s writing talent and Key West life.
Literary and history aficionados can view rare Hemingway artifacts and memorabilia, including his World War I ambulance driver’s uniform, as well as 59 original drawings by famed marine wildlife artist Guy Harvey that provide a visual narrative to Hemingway’s novel, “The Old Man and the Sea.”
On the designated days, Tuesday and Sunday, July 16 and 21, entry to the museum is free to those who mention Hemingway Days at the admission desk.
Though best known for his novels and short stories, Hemingway also wrote poetry. Festival events include the acclaimed Key West Poetry Guild’s annual showcase of the author’s little-known poetry, paired with guild members’ original poems and stories honoring him.
A tradition since 2012, the “Papa’s Poems” reading is to take place from 5:30-7 p.m. Wednesday, July 17, in the Carper Theater at Key West’s Tropic Cinema, 416 Eaton St.
The 1930s in Key West — the Depression era that Hemingway experienced and chronicled in his novel, “To Have and Have Not,” set primarily in the island city — is the subject of a happy-hour presentation by Cori Convertito, Ph.D., curator and historian for the Key West Art & Historical Society.
The presentation is slated for 5 p.m. Thursday, July 18, at Comedy Key West, 218 Whitehead St. Tickets are required and can be purchased through a link at kwahs.org/upcoming-events.
Continuing the Hemingway literary heritage, the festival is associated with the Lorian Hemingway Short Story Competition. Established in 1981 to recognize the work of emerging writers of short fiction, it has been directed since then by Lorian Hemingway, Ernest’s granddaughter and author of books including “Walk on Water.”
Festival information: hemingwaydays.net
Ernest Hemingway's home and writing studio in Key West, where the author lived and wrote for most of his years while residing in Key West in the 1930s, is now a museum. Photo: Carol Tedesco
Famed marine wildlife artist Guy Harvey visits his exhibit of 59 original drawings that provide a visual narrative to Hemingway's novel The Old Man and the Sea at the Customs House museum. Photo: Carol Tedesco
The depression-era period in Key West depicted in Hemingway's novel To Have and Have Not, set in Key West, is the subject of a presentation by Cori Convertito, curator at Key West Art and Historical Society.