In 1922, Hemingway moved to Paris as international correspondent for
The Toronto Star. He met
Gertrude Stein,
F. Scott Fitzgerald and
James Joyce, and
Ezra Pound, and he was quickly "trading boxing and tennis lessons for Pound's advice on writing". Pound's friendship extended to promoting the young author, placing six of Hemingway's poems in
Poetry Magazine. Hemingway was furious but Pound told him he had only lost "the
time it will ... take you to rewrite the parts you can remember ... If the middle, i.e.,
FORM, of the story is right then one ought to be able to reassemble it from memory ... If the thing wobbles and won't reform ... then it never
wd. have been
right." Hemingway did not write again until visiting
Cortina d'Ampezzo the following spring, when, after a fishing trip he wrote "Out of Season", as he says "right off on the typewriter without punctuation". He cut out the story's ending, which he meant to be tragic, on his
theory of omission that "you could omit anything if you knew you omitted [it] and the omitted part would strengthen the story". During their absence from Paris,
Robert McAlmon's Parisian Contact Press published Hemingway's first book,
Three Stories and Ten Poems (1923), which contained "Out of Season". In 1925 the story was reprinted in the New York edition of
In Our Time, published by
Boni & Liveright. The 18 vignettes of
in our time, that had been published by Bill Bird's Three Mountains Press in 1924, were re-ordered and placed between the short stories as interchapters. ==Summary==