I've read it. It's a fascinating book, but different than most Hemingway works. It gets very technical in places. But the stories, the places and the personalities are fascinating. It also has several very cool photos. I didn't mention it in my piece, but across from the Hemingway memorial is a twin memorial for Orson Wells. When I first saw it, I thought, "What the heck is Orson Welles doing here in Ronda?" Turns out that Hemingway was very good friends with Antonio Ordonez, who was considered the greatest bullfighter in the world during the '50s and '60s. Hemingway used Antonio's father as a model for one of his characters in The Sun Also Rises, and it was Antonio who began calling Ernest -- Papa Hemingway. Orson Welles, who was friends with Hemingway, came to Ronda with Ernest and had long talked of doing a movie with bullfighting as a central theme. Wells fell in love with Ronda and ended up spending several months a year at the Ordonez estate, located in the valley below Ronda. When wells died, he had his ashes scattered there. Crazy story. Who would've thought you'd run into Orson Welles in Ronda?