HINCKLEY — Susan F. Beegel will present her illustrated lecture, “A Hemingway Marlin in Maine,” inspired by the L. C. Bates Museum’s skin mount of a blue marlin caught by Hemingway off the island of Bimini in 1935, at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 25, at L.C. Bates Museum, 14 Easler Road, according to a news release from the museum.
She calls the talk “a wild fish chase across the first half of the twentieth century” that will tell the story of two men connected by a big fish — Maine taxidermist Fred C. N. Parke and author Ernest Hemingway. It’s a story about changing environments from Maine to Cuba, and a story about what happens when we fail to respect both the fragility and power of the sea.
According to the release, Beegel is a retired Professor of English who taught in the Williams College-Mystic Seaport program. Editor Emerita of The Hemingway Review, an academic on the life and work of Hemingway, she has published four books and more than 50 scholarly articles on aspects of American literature and history.
She is an authority of Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea,” and has been an enthusiastic traveler to the author’s “islands in the stream,” including Key West, the Dry Tortugas, Bimini, and Cuba
For more information, contact the L.C.Bates Museum at 238-4250 or lcbates@gwh.org.
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