We came upon The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald in the corner of an indigenous artisan’s market in Antigua, Guatemala. More than a bit weathered and musty, it carries the scent (though not the stamp) of a public school library and the marks of having been thumbed by more than one thorough reader. As for the book itself, it is a very complete set of the letters between Fitzgerald and his intimates, including his daughter, Scottie; his wife, Zelda; his editor, Max Perkins; his friend, Ernest Hemingway; and his agent, Harold Ober, among several others. Edited by Fitzgerald’s friend, sometime ward, and fellow Princeton graduate, Andrew Turnbull, the collection provides an intimate look at a man of tremendous talent who, when not on the bottle, was a craftsman of the English language, a loving father, a devoted (if absent) husband, and a loyal friend.
Books, not which afford us a cowering enjoyment, but in which each thought is of unusual daring; such as an idle man cannot read, and a timid one would not be entertained by, which even make us dangerous to existing institution—such I call good books. - Henry David Thoreau
Monday, March 29, 2010
The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Andrew Turnbull, Ed.) (Rating 8.5/10)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Hello! Returning the visit from Dead White Guys. Love, love, love your concept here. My husband will love this blog- he is easily overwhelmed in bookstores because he can't seem to get away from Jane Austen rewrites. What Hemingway said about Fitzgerald is so true.
ReplyDeleteThanks for coming by! I'm going to start putting up links over the next few days. Exchange? Either way, I'll be checking DWG on a regular basis!
ReplyDelete