Ernest Hemingway: Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winner, war hero, famed novelist, journalist, adventurer ― and inspiration to Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Scrooge McDuck, and Goofy! The year: 1999. The place: Italy. Fan-favorite Venetian Disney cartoonist Giorgio Cavazzano dared a creative team to take its cues from Ernest Hemingway for a striking, cinematic, and occasionally silly new series of Duckburg tales! In this original Disney collection, Hemingway’s “The Battler” and “The Killers” inspire new Mickey and Peg Leg Pete parodies while our title adventure features Mickey meeting “Ernest” in person! From Donald’s bid for knighthood as “The Duck Who Would Be King” to Peg Leg Pete’s invasion of a diner in “Bad Boys” and Uncle Scrooge’s shark-wrangling in “The Older Man and the Sea,” these epics range from direct pastiches to shorts loosely based on “Papa” Hemingway’s work ― each paired with its authors’ “liner notes,” telling the fascinating tale of how and why they were inspired. Full-color illustrations throughout
A fun-read, but since I haven't read anything for Hemingway before, I guess I may read it again if I ever read any of the mentioned stories. The art is amazing as it is always in European Disney stories.
"You must go. So that when you return you will have stories to tell".
A paraphrase of Hemingway's: "In order to write about life, first you must live it".
This was an important read for me at the time, it affirmed my decision to move overseas and fulfill a working holiday experience. Charming, inspiring read.
The hook for these stories is that they're inspired by Hemingway but they're far enough removed from the source material I can't see how it makes a difference. In their own right, amusing, but not more than that.
As a huge fan of both Disney and Hemingway, this anthology was tailor-made for me. The information between the comics was interesting as well, but there was a HUGE missed opportunity to tell readers that Walt's and Ernest's birthplaces are a mere five miles apart.
A collection of disney stories loosely based on Ernest Hemingway's works. And that "loosely" is an understatement to the point of serving only as a marketing trick for this book to sell more.
One or two stories really stand-out, the rest are mediocre to plain boring.
I’m generally not a fan of the Italian Style Disney works, but this has a good variety of stories and well done art. Quite enjoyable with nothing outstaying it’s welcome.