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Contributors
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364 Contributors Emma Archer is Assistant Director of the American Language Institute at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. She received a master’s degree in TESOL from American University in Washington, D.C., and a bachelor’s degree in Spanish and English from Bethany College in West Virginia. Lawrence R. Broer is a Professor Emeritus of English at the University of South Florida and the author or editor of nine books, including Hemingway’s Spanish Tragedy (1973), Sanity Plea: Schizophrenia in the Novels of Kurt Vonnegut (1989), Hemingway and Women: Female Critics and the Female Voice (2002), and Vonnegut and Hemingway: Writers at War (2011). Mary Cruz (Camagüey, 1920–2013) has written definitive historical and literary works, such as Camagüey, biografía de una provincia (1955), El Mayor (1973), Sab (1973), Creto Gangá (1974), Cuba y Hemingway en el gran río azul (1981), and El hombre Martí (2007). Her award-winning novels include Los últimos cuatro días (1988), Colombo de Terrarrubra (1994), Niña Tula (1998), and Tula (2001). Joseph M. DeFalco is Emeritus Professor of English at Marquette University. He is the author of Theme of Individuation in the Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway (1961; rpt. 2011), The Hero in Hemingway’s Short Stories (1963; 1968), and Collected Poems of Christopher Pearse Cranch (1971; 1986), and has written various scholarly articles on Hemingway, Frost, Poe, Cooper, and Whitman. Albert J. DeFazio III is editor of Dear Papa, Dear Hotch: The Correspondence of Ernest Hemingway and A. E. Hotchner (2005) and associate editor of The Letters of Ernest Hemingway, Vol. 1 (2011). He also has contributed essays to several collections , notably “Contemporary Reviews” (in Ernest Hemingway in Context, ed. Contributors 365 Debra Moddelmog and Suzanne del Gizzo [2012]), “Skillful Teaching of The Sun Also Rises in the Secondary Schools” (in Teaching The Sun Also Rises, ed. Peter L. Hays [2012]), and “Bibliographic Essay: The Contours of Fitzgerald’s Second Act” (in A Historical Guide to F. Scott Fitzgerald, ed. Kirk Curnutt [2004]). William E. Deibler is retired after more than fifty years as a writer, editor, and journalist, the last thirty at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He was a U.S. Air Force correspondent during the Korean War and an Associated Press correspondent before joining the Post-Gazette, where he served as legislative correspondent, city editor, managing editor, and senior editor. He has participated in literary conferences and written extensively about Ernest Hemingway. Mary Delpino, daughter of Mary Cruz, has been a teacher of English as a second language for more than forty years. She has also worked as a translator. Alma DeRojas is Director of Writing and Editorial Services for University Advancement at Florida International University (FIU) in Miami. She received her Master of Arts in Latin American and Caribbean Studies in 2004 from FIU, where she previously served as a coordinator at the Cuban Research Institute for three years. Larry Grimes is Emeritus Professor of English in the Perry and Aleese Gresham Chair in Humanities at Bethany College. He is the author of The Religious Design of Hemingway’s Early Fiction (1985). His essays and reviews have appeared in several anthologies and journals, including the Hemingway Review, Modern Fiction Studies, and Studies in Short Fiction. The late Keneth Kinnamon, formerly the Ethel Pumphrey Stephens Professor of English at the University of Arkansas, was perhaps best-known as a distinguished scholar of African American literature and a passionate champion of civil rights. His many publications include books on Richard Wright and James Baldwin and articles on Ernest Hemingway. Kelli A. Larson is Professor of English at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, and current bibliographer for the Hemingway Review. In addition to publishing articles on a variety of American writers, including Hemingway, Nella Larsen, and Ambrose Bierce, she is the author of Guide to the Poetry of William Carlos Williams (1995) and Ernest Hemingway: A Reference Guide (1990; rpt. 1992). David B. Martens was hired at the State Journal in Lansing as a Michigan State University student. He later worked as a journalist at the Detroit Free Press, the Los Angeles Times, and Times Mirror cable television. He was publisher of the Advertiser-Tribune in Ohio and of the York Daily Record in Pennsylvania. He is [44.222.169.36] Project MUSE (2024-03-29 10:20 GMT) 366 Contributors now publisher of the York Dispatch. Scott O. McClintock is an Associate Professor of Arts and Humanities at National University. His research interests...