Hemingways
Hemingways golden years have been left in the yard
Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum. At Key West, the only thing that can't be avoided is Hemingway, whether you're in a restaurant, bar or plaza.
In the 1930s, he lived in the southernmost town of the United States for nearly a decade. In addition to his well-known writer label, he is also an excellent boxer, a global traveler, a brave battlefield hero, an avid fisherman and hunter, and a senior alcoholic gambler.
The period of residence in Key West is Hemingway's golden years. He usually gets up at 6 in the morning, writing until noon, and fishing or drinking in the afternoon and evening. Most of the words in "Farewell to Weapons", "The Rich and the Poor", "Death in the Afternoon", "The Green Hills of Africa", "The Snow of Kilimanjaro" and "Who Is the Death Bell?" Written in this house.
The descendants of the Hemingway family, but he was a six-toed cat called "Snowball" that was raised in the same year. Today, 59 cats living in the house are descendants. They can enter and exit at will in front of the house, even if they are surrounded by Hemingway's antique beds and rocking chairs, they are also their resting place.