
Novels and Stories 1920–1922: This Side of Paradise / Flappers and Philosophers / The Beautiful and Damned / Tales of the Jazz Age
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
At the outset of what he called “the greatest, the gaudiest spree in history,” F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the works that brought him instant fame, mastering the glittering aphoristic prose and keen social observation that would distinguish all his writing. Celebrating the riotous energy and naïve optimism of a generation that believed itself liberated from the past, Fitzgerald’s early works, which are collected in this Library of America volume, also sound a plaintive strain beneath the era’s wild cacophony, a lament for the wasted potential of youth. They remain the fullest literary expression of one of the most fascinating eras in American life.This Side of Paradise (1920) gave Fitzgerald the early success that defined and haunted him for the rest of his career. Offering in its Princeton chapters the most enduring portrait of college life in American literature, this lyrical novel records the ardent and often confused longings of its hero’s struggles to find love and to formulate a philosophy of life.Flappers and Philosophers (1920), a collection of accomplished short stories, includes such classics as “Dalyrimple Goes Wrong,” “Bernice Bobs Her Hair,” and “The Ice Palace.”Fitzgerald continues his dissection of a self-destructive era in his second novel, The Beautiful and Damned (1922), as the self-styled aristocrat Anthony Patch and his beautiful wife, Gloria, are cut off from an inheritance and forced to endure the excruciating dwindling of their fortune. Here New York City, playground for the pleasure-loving Patches and brutal mirror of their dissipation, is portrayed more vividly than anywhere else in Fitzgerald’s work.Tales of the Jazz Age (1922), his second collection of stories, includes the novella “May Day,” featuring interlocking tales of debutantes, soldiers, and socialists brought together in the uncertain aftermath of World War I, and “A Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” a fable in which the excesses of the Jazz Age take the hallucinatory form of a palace of unfathomable opulence hidden deep in the Montana Rockies.
Więcej od F. Scott Fitzgerald
100 Masterpieces of World Literature: 1984, On the Road, The Old Man and the Sea, Pride and Prejudice, Mrs. Dalloway, Moby-Dick, Ulysses, Frankenstein, The Chronicles of Narnia
Marcus Aurelius, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoevsky, George Orwell, Jonathan Swift, Sun Tzu, Niccolò Machiavelli, Lao Tzu, Erich Maria Remarque, Aldous Huxley, Ernest Hemingway, Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Dickens, John Steinbeck, Lewis Carroll, Edith Wharton, George Eliot, Gustave Flaubert, James Joyce, Thomas Hardy, Albert Camus, Franz Kafka, William Faulkner, Jack London, Oscar Wilde, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Louisa May Alcott, Mark Twain, John Milton, Kenneth Grahame, Nikolai Gogol, L. Frank Baum, Anne Brontë, Arthur Conan Doyle, Rudyard Kipling, William Makepeace Thackeray, Jane Austen, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Virginia Woolf, Ford Madox Ford, Joseph Conrad, Victor Hugo, D.H. Lawrence, Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, C.S. Lewis, L.M. Montgomery, Walt Whitman, Emily Brontë, Virgil, Ivan Turgenev, Stendhal, Raymond Chandler, Homer, Sylvia Plath, Herman Melville, T.S. Eliot, Carson McCullers, Richard Wright, Kate Chopin, Alexandre Dumas, Bram Stoker, Marcel Proust, Margaret Mitchell, Dante Alighieri, Henrik Ibsen, Sophocles, Daniel Defoe, E.M. Forster, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Charlotte Brontë, Plato, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Wilkie Collins, Thomas Mann, Dashiell Hammett, Jack Kerouac, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Friedrich Nietzsche, Evelyn Waugh, Malcolm Lowry, Neale Hurston
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