Today F. Scott Fitzgerald is better known for his novels, but in his own time, his fame rested squarely on his prolific achievement as one of America's most gifted writers of stories and novellas. Now, a half-century after the author's death, the premier Fitzgerald scholar and biographer, Matthew J. Bruccoli, has assembled in one volume the full scope of Fitzgerald's best short fiction: forty-three sparkling masterpieces, ranging from such classic novellas as "The Rich Boy," "May Day," and "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" to his commercial work for the
Saturday Evening Post and its sister "slicks."
For the reader, these stories will underscore the depth and extraordinary range of Fitzgerald's literary talents. Furthermore, Professor Bruccoli's illuminating preface and introductory headnotes establish the literary and biographical settings in which these stories now shine anew with brighter luster than ever.
Spanning the author's entire career, this collection of 43 of Fitzgerald's short stories "present Fitzgerald's craftmanship, versatility, originality, and his gift for conveying the emotional tenor of characters and situations" (Merle Rubin, The Houston Post).
"More than enough to re-establish Fitzgerald as a master of the American short story." -- Mark Caldwell,
The Philadelphia Inquirer