Listen "James H. Meredith on "Who Murdered the Vets?""
Episode Synopsis
“Who Murdered the Vets?” is one of the most important non-fiction pieces Hemingway ever wrote. This 1935 article for New Masses excoriated the Roosevelt administration’s careless supervision of World War I veterans who died during the Labor Day hurricane while they were living in workcamps along the Keys. Stationed there to help to build the overseas highway, more than 250 died as victims of the cataclysmic storm.Hemingway wrote what he called his “2800 words of dynamite” in a frothing rage, furious at the irresponsibility of the government, shocked at what he had witnessed firsthand, and grieving for the veterans who survived the Great War, only to lose their lives at home. To discuss this explosive article and its crucial context, we welcome James H. Meredith, the former President of the Hemingway Society. Jim’s perspective walks us through Hemingway’s approach to this tragedy and how he composed such a vivid, emotional polemic.
More episodes of the podcast One True Podcast
Ross K. Tangedal on Hemingway in 1926
01/01/2026
Suzanne del Gizzo on "Christmas in Paris"
18/12/2025
Ahmed Honeini on William Faulkner, Part 2
20/11/2025
William Blazek on The Great Gatsby at 100
07/11/2025
One True Sentence #39 with Michael Deagler
23/10/2025
Lavinia Greacen on Chink Dorman-Smith
18/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.