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“Christ I hate to leave Paris for Toronto the City of churches” (30), Hemingway had written to his Oak Park friend Isabelle Simmons in 1923 as he and his pregnant wife Hadley prepared to cross the Atlantic to take advantage of superior North American medical facilities. And he composed several longer stories, including “Fifty Grand” and “The Undefeated,” that would appear in his second short story collection, Men Without Women (1927). In some of his longest letters ever, he wrote extensive descriptions of bullfighting that he asked his old Petoskey friend Bill Smith to save for him these would later be incorporated into Death in the Afternoon (1932). He wrote-in just two weeks!-and immediately submitted for publication a satire called The Torrents of Spring (1926). He completed a first draft of his first novel, The Sun Also Rises (1926), which many believe to be the freshest and finest novel he would ever write. But during the next three years, Hemingway wrote the best stories of In Our Time (1925), including his earliest-and some say best-Nick Adams stories. The period began with a frustrated Hemingway responding to yet another rejection of his fiction by crying out, “I want, like hell, to get published” (21). The second volume of The Letters of Ernest Hemingway, 1923–1925, covers arguably the most productive period in Hemingway’s literary life.