
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896 – December 21, 1940) was an American novelist and short story writer. His most famous work is The Great Gatsby.1
Works
Novels
- This Side of Paradise (1920)
- The Beautiful and Damned (1922)
- The Great Gatsby (1925)
- Tender Is the Night (1934)
- The Last Tycoon (1941) unfinished
Story collections
- Flappers and Philosophers (1920)
- Tales of the Jazz Age (1922)
- All the Sad Young Men (1926)
- Taps at Reveille (1935)
- The Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1951)
- Babylon Revisited and Other Stories (1960)
- The Pat Hobby Stories (1962)
- The Apprentice Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1965)
- The Basil and Josephine Stories (1973)
- The Price Was High: The Last Uncollected Stories (1979)
- The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1989)
- Before Gatsby: The First Twenty-Six Stories (2001)
- I’d Die For You and Other Lost Stories (2017)
Other works
- The Vegetable: Or, From President To Postman (1923)
- The Crack-Up (1945)
- Afternoon of An Author (1958)
- Bits of Paradise (1974)
- Poems 1911-1940 (1981)
- The Thoughtbook of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Secret Boyhood Diary (2013)
Letters
- The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1963)
- Dear Scott/Dear Max: The Fitzgerald-Perkins Correspondence (1971)
- As Ever, Scott Fitz: Letters between F. Scott Fitzgerald & Harold Ober 1919-40 (1972)
- Correspondence of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1980)
- A Life in Letters (1980)
- Dear Scott, Dearest Zelda: The Love Letters of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald (1985)
See also
- F. Scott Fitzgerald quotes
- Bob Dylan and F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Christmas stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Dorothy Parker
External Links
- F. Scott Fitzgerald Society
- IMDb profile
- Goodreads profile
- MNopedia profile
- Fitzgerald papers at Princeton University
- Fitzgerald papers at the University of South Carolina
- Annotated Bibliography from Scott-Fitzgerald.com
- Fitzgerald material on Internet Archive
- Public Domain recordings of Fitzgerald’s works at LibriVox
References
1. “F. Scott Fitzgerald.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed July 27, 2020.