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Building visited by creatives and politicians from around the world set alight by gangs as unrest grips country ...
Haiti’s famed Oloffson Hotel, a cultural landmark and celebrity haven, was incinerated amid rising violence by gangs that ...
Jackie Onassis and Mick Jagger once slept there, and writer Graham Greene immortalized it. Now Haitian gangs have destroyed ...
Haiti 's once-illustrious Grand Hôtel Oloffson, a beloved Gothic gingerbread home that inspired books, hosted parties until ...
Immortalized in Graham Greene's novel The Comedians, destroyed by gang violence The Hotel Oloffson in Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, long a haven for artists and writers, poets and presidents, a ...
No more dancing, no more dining, no more nights at the Oloffson. Gone are the meetups, the dates, the rum sours, the RAM ...
Prince, long a haven for artists and writers, poets and presidents, a symbol of Haiti's troubled politics and its storied ...
The British papers offer hope – and a warning – as French President Emmanuel Macron begins the first French state visit to ...
As a Graham Greene fan, I tried in vain to contain my excitement as I sat for the first time on the veranda of the Hotel Oloffson with Richard A. Morse, the young “voodoo rock” musician from ...
It’s all there in “The Comedians,” Graham Greene’s 1966 novel set in Haiti more than four decades ago — a book that seems, sadly, all too up-to-date in light of last week’s earthquake.
Graham Greene is a literary legend, famous for best-selling spy novels like Our Man in Havana, The End of the Affair, and The Quiet American. But the writer was as mysterious as his characters ...