The Beautiful and Damned

Front Cover
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, Feb 23, 2011 - Fiction - 400 pages

Introduction by Hortense Calisher
Commentary by Edmund Wilson, Henry Seidel Canby, and Arthur Mizener
 
Fitzgerald’s second novel, a devastating portrait of the excesses of the Jazz Age, is a largely autobiographical depiction of a glamorous, reckless Manhattan couple and their spectacular spiral into tragedy. Published on the heels of This Side of Paradise, the story of the Harvard-educated aesthete Anthony Patch and his willful wife, Gloria, is propelled by Fitzgerald’s intense romantic imagination and demonstrates an increased technical and emotional maturity. The Beautiful and Damned is at once a gripping morality tale, a rueful meditation on love, marriage, and money, and an acute social document. As Hortense Calisher observes in her Introduction, “Though Fitzgerald can entrance with stories so joyfully youthful they appear to be safe—when he cuts himself, you will bleed.”

Includes a Modern Library Reading Group Guide 

 

Selected pages

Contents

Anthony Patch 323
3
Portrait of a Siren
26
The Connoisseur of Kisses
63
The Radiant Hour
113
Symposium
165
The Broken Lute
226
A Matter of Civilization
269
A Matter of Aesthetics
310
No Matter
350
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Hortense Calisher (19112009) was the author of more than twenty books, including the National Book Award nominees False Entry, Herself, and The Collected Stories of Hortense Calisher.

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