This paper focuses on three chapters about captain Yegorov and Katya Lugina in Sergei Dovlatov's novel entitled 30Ha (The Zone: A Prison Camp Guard's Story). The intertext shown and discussed in the paper suggests that the three chapters may be viewed as a 'modified version' of Ernest Hemingway's WWI novel A Farewell to Arms. We then use the intertext as the basis for the discussion of Dovlatov's dialogue with Hemingway and the value of Hemingway's personality and works for Dovlatov. We analyze two aspects of Dovlatov's dialogue with Hemingway: (1) Dovlatov's emotional response to Hemingway's novel and (2) Dovlatov's contemplation of esthetics of art. In the end, we discuss the notion of tradition in connection with Dovlatov's dialogue with Hemingway.