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Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896 – December 21, 1940), widely known simply as Scott Fitzgerald, [1] was an American novelist, essayist, and short story writer. He is best known for his novels depicting the flamboyance and excess of the Jazz Age , a term he popularized in his short story collection Tales of the Jazz Age .
The Apprentice Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1965) "Reade, Substitute Right Half" St. Paul Academy Now and Then (Feb 1910) "A Debt of Honor" St. Paul Academy Now and Then (March 1910) "The Room with the Green Blinds" St. Paul Academy Now and Then (June 1911) "A Luckless Santa Claus" Newman News (Dec 24, 1912) "Pain and the Scientist" Newman ...
Michael Price (October 21, 1940 – May 5, 2001), was a 20th-century sculptor specializing in public art. [1] His best known installation is his sculpture of F. Scott Fitzgerald, installed in 1996 in Rice Park, Saint Paul, Minnesota, to commemorate Fitzgerald's 100th birthday. [2]
Two upstairs apartments, the "Zelda Suite" and the "Scott Suite", are available to rent through Airbnb. [2] The Fitzgerald Prize for Literary Excellence is awarded annually by the museum "to an author whose work continues the legacy of American storytelling while also exemplifying the craft, wit, and social insight typified by F. Scott ...
The Crack-Up is a 1945 posthumous collection of essays by American author F. Scott Fitzgerald.It includes three essays Fitzgerald originally wrote for Esquire which were first published in 1936, including the title essay, along with previously unpublished letters and notes.
Babylon Revisited collects ten of F. Scott Fitzgerald's best-known short stories. In an afterword to the 1996 edition, Fitzgerald scholar Matthew Bruccoli describes the period leading up to the selection, "F. Scott Fitzgerald died believing himself a failure. The obituaries were condescending, and he seemed destined for literary obscurity.
F. Scott Fitzgerald. Upon publication—and somewhat belying the notion that Fitzgerald's most famous novel had not been enthusiastically received—The New York Times wrote, "The publication of this volume of short stories might easily have been an anti-climax after the perfection and success of The Great Gatsby of last Spring. A novel so ...
The Price Was High: Fifty Uncollected Stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a volume of short fiction by F. Scott Fitzgerald published by Harcourt Brace & Company in 1979. [1]The volume comprises stories originally appearing in popular literary journals, but never authorized for collection by Fitzgerald during his lifetime.