Though most widely known for the novella The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald gained a major source of income as a professional writer from the sale of short stories. Over the course of his career, Fitzgerald published more than 160 stories in the period's most popular magazines. His second short fiction collection, Tales of the Jazz Age (1922), includes two masterpieces as well as several other stories from his earlier career. One, "May Day," depicts a party at a popular club in New York that becomes a night of revelry during which former soldiers and an affluent group of young people start an anti-Bolshevik demonstration that results in an attack on a leftist newspaper office. "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" is a fantastic satire of the selfishness endemic to the wealthy and their undying pursuit to preserve that way of life.
All of these stories, like his best novels, meld Fitzgerald's fascination with wealth with an awareness of a larger world, creating a subtle social critique. With his discerning eye, Fitzgerald elucidates the interactions of the young people of post-World War I America who, cut off from traditions, sought their place in the modern world amid the general hysteria of the period that inaugurated the age of jazz.
This new edition reproduces in full the original collection, stories that represent a clear movement in theme and character development toward what would become The Great Gatsby. In introducing each story, Fitzgerald offers accounts of its textual history, revealing decisions about which stories to include.
F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) is author of numerous acclaimed stories and novels, including The Great Gatsby, Tender Is the Night, and The Last Tycoon.
Biography
The greatest writers often function in multifaceted ways, serving as both emblems of their age and crafters of timeless myth. F. Scott Fitzgerald surely fits this description. His work was an undeniable product of the so-called Jazz Age of the 1920s, yet it has a quality that spans time, reaching backward into gothic decadence and forward into the future of a rapidly decaying America. Through five novels, six short story collections, and one collection of autobiographical pieces, Fitzgerald chronicled a precise point in post-WWI America, yet his writing resonates just as boldly today as it did nearly a century ago.
Fitzgerald's work was chiefly driven by the disintegration of America following World War I. He believed the country to be sinking into a cynical, Godless, depraved morass. He was never reluctant to voice criticism of America's growing legions of idle rich. Recreating a heated confrontation with Ernest Hemingway in a short story called "The Rich Boy," Fitzgerald wrote, "Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me. They possess and enjoy early, and it does something to them, makes them soft where we are hard, and cynical where we are trustful, in a way that, unless you were born rich, it is very difficult to understand. They think, deep in their hearts, that they are better than we are because we had to discover the compensations and refuges of life for ourselves. Even when they enter deep into our world or sink below us, they still think that they are better than we are. They are different."
The preceding quote may sum Fitzgerald's philosophy more completely than any other, yet he also hypocritically embodied much of what he claimed to loathe. Fitzgerald spent money freely, threw lavish parties, drank beyond excess, and globe-trotted with his glamorous but deeply troubled wife Zelda. Still, in novel after novel, he sought to expose the great chasm that divided the haves from the have-nots and the hollowness of wealth. In This Side of Paradise (1920) he cynically follows opulent, handsome Amory Blaine as he bounces aimlessly from Princeton to the military to an uncertain, meaningless future. In The Beautiful and the Damned (1922) Fitzgerald paints a withering portrait of a seemingly idyllic marriage between a pair of socialites that crumbles in the face of Adam Patch's empty pursuit of profit and the fading beauty of his vane wife Gloria.
The richest example of Fitzgerald's disdain for the upper class arrived three years later. The Great Gatsby is an undoubted American classic, recounting naïve Nick Carraway's involvement with a coterie of affluent Long Islanders, and his ultimate rejection of them when their casual decadence leads only to internal back-stabbing and murder. Nick is fascinated by the mysterious Jay Gatsby, who had made the fatal mistake of stepping outside of his lower class status to pursue the lovely but self-centered Daisy Buchanan.
In The Great Gatsby, all elements of Fitzgerald's skills coalesced to create a narrative that is both highly readable and subtly complex. His prose is imbued with elegant lyricism and hard-hitting realism. "It is humor, irony, ribaldry, pathos and loveliness," Edwin C. Clark wrote of the book in the New York Times upon its 1925 publication. "A curious book, a mystical, glamorous story of today. It takes a deeper cut at life than hitherto has been essayed by Mr. Fitzgerald."
Gatsby is widely considered to be Fitzgerald's masterpiece and among the very greatest of all American literature. It is the ultimate summation of his contempt for the Jazz-Age with which he is so closely associated. Gatsby is also one of the clearest and saddest reflections of his own destructive relationship with Zelda, which would so greatly influence the mass of his work.
Fitzgerald only managed to complete one more novel -- Tender is the Night -- before his untimely death in 1940. An unfinished expose of the Hollywood studio system titled The Love of the Last Tycoon would be published a year later. Still The Great Gatsby remains his quintessential novel. It has been a fixture of essential reading lists for decades and continues to remain an influential work begging to be revisited. It has been produced for the big screen three times and was the subject of a movie for television starring Toby Stephens, Mira Sorvino, and Paul Rudd as recently as 2000. Never a mere product of a bygone age, F. Scott Fitzgerald's greatest work continues to evade time.
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这份选集给我的体验,更像是一次精心的“品鉴”过程,而非单纯的“阅读”。每一篇短篇都像是一件打磨过的艺术品,线条清晰,主题明确,且在收尾处都留有足够的空间供读者自行想象和回味。我尤其欣赏作者对于环境氛围的营造能力,那不是简单的背景板,而是与人物命运紧密交织的有机体。比如某篇描绘海岸边景象的文字,那种潮湿、咸涩的空气感,几乎让我打了个寒颤,仿佛能感受到海风吹过脸颊的力度。叙事者的声音变化多端,时而是旁观者冷峻的审视,时而又化为局中人热烈的情感倾诉,这种视角的切换,使得故事的层次感异常丰富。它并不追求大开大合的戏剧冲突,而是钟情于那些微妙的眼神交汇、未说出口的话语,以及由此引发的内心海啸。读毕,我感到的是一种精神上的满足感,就像品尝了一份层次丰富的顶级甜点,回味悠长。
评分这本书简直是一场穿越时空的音乐会,虽然我完全不了解“爵士时代”到底是个什么光景,但作者笔下的那些场景和人物,却像老电影的胶片一样,在我眼前生动地放映着。那种空气中弥漫着香烟和昂贵香水味的感觉,隔着纸页都能闻到。故事里人物的对话火花四溅,充满了那个特定年代特有的那种轻佻又略带忧郁的腔调。我尤其喜欢作者描述那种奢靡派对的细节,那些衣着光鲜的年轻人,他们表面的光鲜亮丽之下,似乎总隐藏着某种难以言喻的空虚。每一次翻页,都像是在探索一个华丽但脆弱的玻璃罩,好奇着罩子下面真实的生活脉络究竟是怎样的。读完后,我感觉自己仿佛参加了一场盛大的舞会,曲终人散时,留下的只有残留的旋律和一丝若有似无的惆怅。这本书的叙事节奏把握得极好,时而急促如同一段即兴演奏,时而又舒缓得像是慢板情歌,让人完全沉浸其中,忘记了自己身处的现实世界。
评分坦白讲,这本书给我的冲击力并非来自情节的曲折离奇,而是源于它对“情绪质感”的精准捕捉。它成功地将一种特定时代背景下的集体情绪——那种在繁荣表象下潜藏的焦虑与失落感——完美地注入到每一个独立的故事之中。阅读过程中,我常常有一种“原来不止我一个人这样想”的释然感。作者的词汇选择非常考究,既有古典文学的韵味,又不失现代口语的活力,形成了一种既疏离又亲近的独特文风。它像是一面镜子,照见的不仅仅是故事中人物的困境,也映射出我们自身在面对生活选择时的犹豫与挣扎。这本书的价值在于,它提供了一种深入理解复杂人性的视角,它不提供简单的答案,而是提供一个更清晰、更美丽也更残酷的问题。总而言之,这是一次非常值得的阅读投入,它丰富了我的精神世界,也让我对“讲故事”这件事有了新的认识。
评分对于习惯了快节奏叙事的读者来说,这本书的阅读体验可能需要稍微调整一下步频。它不是那种能让你一口气读完、然后就盖上封皮的书。相反,它要求你放慢速度,去体会那些被精心安放的停顿和留白。我注意到作者在处理人物内心活动时,采取了一种近乎“意识流”的细腻手法,那种思绪的跳跃和重组,真实地模拟了我们日常的思维模式——并非总是一条直线。特别是那些关于理想与现实碰撞的主题,作者的处理方式非常克制,没有落入俗套的说教,而是让人物自己在困境中完成自我辩驳和救赎。这种内敛的力量,反而更具穿透力。我个人对其中几篇涉及艺术与创作的故事非常着迷,那里面对“何为真正的创造力”的探讨,让人深思良久,可以说是对所有从事创造性工作的人的一种无声的致敬与鞭策。
评分说实话,初捧此书时,我对手头这份“故事集”抱持着一种谨慎的观望态度,毕竟“某时代”的题材,常常容易流于表面化的符号堆砌。然而,这本书的精妙之处在于,它并没有试图去复刻历史教科书,而是用一种极其细腻且略带疏离感的笔触,勾勒出个体在时代洪流中的挣扎与狂欢。那些“其他故事”的穿插,更是令人惊喜,它们像散落在桌面上的宝石,各自闪烁着独特的光芒,但又共同指向了一种更宏大的人性母题——关于渴望、失落和不被理解的孤独。我发现自己常常需要停下来,不是因为情节复杂,而是因为某个句子、某个比喻,突然精准地击中了心底深处某个隐秘的角落。这种共鸣感是强烈的,它超越了时间和地域的限制,让我意识到,无论是哪个年代,人心的纠结与追寻,本质上并无二致。这本书的文字密度很高,值得反复咀嚼。
评分不喜欢盖茨比可以看这本,很好看!
评分The Diamond as Big as the Ritz. 集奇幻、奇情於一身的作品。
评分The Diamond as Big as the Ritz. 集奇幻、奇情於一身的作品。
评分The Diamond as Big as the Ritz. 集奇幻、奇情於一身的作品。
评分不喜欢盖茨比可以看这本,很好看!
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