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186 BIBLIOGRAPHY Bibliography “5,000,000 in Day’s Parade.” New York Times, May 19, 1918, 9. “9 Chicagoans Named in Lists of Casualties.” Chicago Evening Post, July 16, 1918, 1. Adair, William. “Hemingway’s ‘A Veteran Visits His Old Front’: Images and Situations for the Fiction.” ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews 8, no. 1 (1995): 27–31. “Aid for Italy Is Hastened by American Red Cross.” Red Cross Bulletin, November 13, 1918, 2. Aiken, Conrad. “Expatriates.” New York Herald Tribune Books, October 31, 1926, vii. “Al on Permission.” Come Stà, April 10, 1918, 3. Allen, Warner and Martin Hardie. OurItalianFront. London: A. & C. Black, Ltd., 1920. American National Red Cross Records. National Archives, College Park, MD. “The American Red Cross at the Front.” Red Cross Bulletin, July 5, 1918, 1. “And Yet More Driving Power.” Ciao, April, 1918, 1. “A. T. Hemingway.” Oak Leaves, July 20, 1918, 2. Baker, Carlos. Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story. New York: Scribners, 1969. ———. The Writer As Artist. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1963. “Baker Will Be Orator in Italy-America Day.” New York Times, May 19, 1918, 5. Bakewell, Charles M. The Story of the American Red Cross in Italy. New York: Macmillan , 1920. Barton, William. Our Fight for the Heritage of Humanity. Oak Park, IL: First Congregational Church, 1918. ———. The Praise of the Wrath of Man and The Rebuilding of the World, Two Sermons. Oak Park, IL: First Congregational Church, 1918. Bates, Robert W. Papers. Private collection. ———. “Report of Captain Bates.” Red Cross Bulletin, July 5, 1918, 7. Bates, Stephen. “‘An Apostle for His Work’: The Death of Lieutenant Edward Michael McKey.” Hemingway Review 29, no. 2 (2010): 61–73. ———. “‘Unpopularity Is the Least of My Worries’: Captain R. W. Bates and Lieutenant E. M. Hemingway.” Hemingway Review 29, no. 1 (2009): 47–60. “Beg Pardon, Ring!” Avanti, February 1, 1918, 4. “Belgium Scorned Peace.” Kansas City Star, October 29, 1917, 1. “Blames Italian Leaders.” Kansas City Star, November 30, 1917, A15. Brasch, James D. and Joseph Sigman. Hemingway’s Library: A Composite Record. New York: Garland, 1981. 186 BIBLIOGRAPHY 187 Brenner, Gerry. “‘Enough of a Bad Gamble’: Correcting the Misinformation on Hemingway ’s Captain James Gamble.” Hemingway Review 20, no. 1 (2000): 90–96. Brian, Denis. The True Gen: An Intimate Portrait of Hemingway by Those Who Knew Him. New York: Grove Press, 1988. Bruccoli, Matthew J., ed. Conversations with Ernest Hemingway. Jackson, MI: UP of Mississippi, 1986. ———. Hemingway and the Mechanism of Fame: Statements, Public Letters, Introductions, Forewords, Prefaces, Blurbs, Reviews, and Endorsements. With Judith S. Baughman. Columbia, SC: U of South Carolina P, 2006. ———. The Only Thing That Counts: The Ernest Hemingway/Maxwell Perkins Correspondence 1925–1947. With the assistance of Robert W. Trogdon. New York: Scribner, 1996. Brumback, Theodore. “With Hemingway Before A Farewell to Arms.” Kansas City Star, December 6, 1936, C1-C3. Buske, Morris. “What if Ernest Had Been Born on the Other Side of the Street?” In Ernest Hemingway: The Oak Park Legacy, edited by James Nagel, 209–16. Tuscaloosa , AL: U of Alabama P, 1996. Buswell, Leslie. With the American Ambulance Field Service in France: Personal Letters of a Driver at the Front. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1916. Cacciapuoti, F. “Letter from an Italian Liaison Officer.” Red Cross Bulletin, July 5, 1918, 7. “The Cavalry Saved Italy.” Kansas City Star, November 4, 1917, A8. Clark, C. E. Frazer, Jr. “American Red Cross Reports on the Wounding of Lieutenant Ernest M. Hemingway—1918.” Fitzgerald/Hemingway Annual (1974): 131–36. Clark, Col. C. E. Frazer. “This Is the Way it Was on the Chicago and At the Front: 1917 War Letters.” Fitzgerald/Hemingway Annual (1970): 153–68. Clark, Harvey C. Report of the Department of the Adjutant General of Missouri, January 1, 1917–December 31, 1920. Jefferson City, MO: Office of the Adjutant General, 1921. Cohen, Milton A. Hemingway’s Laboratory: The Paris “in our time.” Tuscaloosa, AL: U of Alabama P, 2005. ———. “War Medals for Sale? Public Bravery vs. Private Courage in Hemingway’s WWI Writing.” North Dakota Quarterly 68, nos. 2–3 (2001): 287–94. Comley, Nancy R. “The Italian Education of Ernest Hemingway.” In Hemingway’s Italy: New Perspectives, edited by Rena Sanderson, 41–50. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State UP, 2006. Cowley, Malcolm. ExilesReturn:ALiteraryOdysseyofthe1920s. New York: Viking, 1951. ———. “Hemingway Portrait of an Old Soldier Preparing to Die.” New York Herald Tribune Book Review, September 10, 1950, 1, 6. ———. “Not Yet Demobilized.” New York Herald Tribune, October 6, 1929...

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