Reader Score
79%
79% of readers
recommend this book
Flappers and Philosophers was published in 1920 on the heels of Fitzgerald's sensational debut, This Side of Paradise, and anticipated themes in The Great Gatsby. This iconic collection marks the writer's entry into short fiction, and contains some of his most famous early stories, including "Bernice Bobs Her Hair," "The Ice Palace," "Head and Shoulders," and "The Offshore Pirate." In these pages we meet Fitzgerald's trademark characters: the beautiful, headstrong young women and the dissolute, wandering young men who comprised what came to be called the Lost Generation. With their bobbed hair and dangling cigarettes, his characters are sophisticated, witty, and, above all, modern: the spoiled heiress who falls for her kidnapper, the intellectual student whose life is turned upside-down by a chorus girl, the feuding debutantes whose weapons are cutting words and a pair of scissors. An instant classic in its time, a confirmed part of the canon today, this collection evokes 1920s America through the eyes of a writer indelibly linked to that singular era.
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We’re wishing a happy birthday to F. Scott Fitzgerald, who was born on this day in 1896. Best known for his classic powerhouse The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald published 4 novels, 4 story collections, and over 160 short stories. Which of Fitzgerald’s works are your favorite? https://t.co/QOWYImfpFX
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F. Scott Fitzgerald: Novels & Stories 1920–1922 https://t.co/HhgawBZOVn 😉 https://t.co/RuVg6eS53p
screenwriter ✿ film & tv critic @screenspeck ✿ rep: lyra tan @thegershagency
at first glance the calliope story reminds me of how men have often stolen and taken stories written by women (cough cough f scott fitzgerald stealing zelda's work) and gotten personal success out of it
"His talent was as natural as the pattern that was made by the dust on a butterfly's wings."
--Ernest Hemingway