By Carlos Baker.
Hemingway has been ill-served by Carlos Baker and Kenneth S. Lynn, among others.
Carlos Baker, his biographer, wrote, "The tall daiquiris came and went in seemingly inexhaustible supply."
Stegner's story is "masterly and engaging," Carlos Baker wrote here.
In 1943, with Steinbeck now famous, Carlos Baker "revalued" the novel.
One edition, with 600 letters selected by Carlos Baker, an early Hemingway biographer, was published in 1981, 20 years after the author's suicide.
And he is just plain wrong when he concludes: "There's little in this book that Carlos Baker, in his 1969 biography, didn't say better."
According to Hemingway's biographer, Carlos Baker, The Killers "was the first film from any of his works that Ernest could genuinely admire."
Carlos Baker, Hemingway's main biographer, wrote in 1968: "Agnes refused to permit the affair to progress beyond the kissing stage.
Carlos Baker views the stories of In Our Time as a remarkable achievement for a young writer.