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There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed." What does Hemingway mean? How is he bleeding?

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There’s a lot of dialogue that sounds as studied as Hemingway must have intended it to sound as he declaimed it (“Let me tell you about writers — the best ones are all liars”) and stuff that’s almost certainly cobbled together from various sources. (I was particularly amused when a negative review of the movie today in The New York Times made a point of ridiculing one Hemingway line — “There’s nothing to writing, Gellhorn — all you do is sit down to your typewriter and bleed” — but failed to realize it most likely derived from a New York Times sportswriter Red Smith’s wry dictum, “Writing it easy; all you have to do is open a vein and bleed.”)

User Rudra Shah
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by expressing himself and pouring his imagination and creative thoughts on a piece of paper.
User Greg Owens
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