- Overview
- M.J.Bruccoli on Hemingway & the Thirties
- Hemingway: Apprenticeship and Paris
- Hemingway: Men Without Women & A Farewell to Arms
- Heminway: Spain and Africa
- Hemingway War in Spain and The Fifth Column
- Hemingway: For Whom the Bell Tolls
- Hemingway: WWII and Later Books
- A Hemingway Chronology
- Maurice J. Speiser
- Access and Permissions
Published items in the collection are catalogued individually through the library's online catalog. Searching by author, title, and date provides information on holdings not only within the Speiser collection, but in the closely related Matthew J. & Arlyn Bruccoli Collection of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Holdings in the collection catalogued in the catalog may also be browsed by an "Author" search under the collection heading:
Speiser and Easterling-Hallman
Manuscripts, letters, and other unpublished materials is currently being catalogued as a archive, with a finding list linked from this page.
Published and catalogued materials are available to registered researchers, subject only to review of fragile or easily-damaged items. Note that unpublished materials, including correspondence, remain subject to copyright. The library requires documentation of necessary copyright clearances before any substantial research project is commenced on such materials.
Detailed information about Hemingway copyrights in published and unpublished material is available from the Hemingway Foundation:
The Ernest Hemingway Foundation
Fax: (225) 578-4129
c/o Prof. J. Gerald Kennedy
E-mail: jgkenn@lsu.edu
Department of English
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803-5001
http://www.hemingwaysociety.org/#permissions.asp
Further inquiries about the Speiser and Easterling-Hallman Collection of Ernest Hemingway should be directed to:
Department of Rare Books & Special Collections
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
Tel: 803-777-3847.
E-mail: tclrarebooks@mailbox.sc.edu.
www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/rarebook.html





This library is a congressionaly designated depository for U.S. government documents. Public access to the government documents collections is guaranteed by public law.