The Romantic Egoists
A Pictorial Autobiography from the Scrapbooks and Albums of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald

Edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli, Scottie Fitzgerald Smith, and Joan P. Kerr

A most intriguing perspective on a legendary literary couple

8 1/2 x 11, 264 pages
524 halftones, 587 line art
paper, ISBN 1-57003-529-6, $29.95t

About the Book

About the Author

Reviews

Flyer

Also from the Editor

Order the Book

ABOUT THE BOOK

This pictorial autobiography of Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald documents two lives that have become legendary. The Romantic Egoists draws almost entirely from the scrapbooks and photograph albums that the Fitzgeralds scrupulously kept as their personal record and provides a wealth of illustrative material not previously available.
In a unique way this book gives Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald's own story. The variety is surprising: Fitzgerald's thoughts about his early loves in St. Paul, Minnesota; a photograph of the country club in Montgomery, Alabama, where the two met; reviews of This Side of Paradise; poems to the couple from Ring Lardner; snapshots of their trips abroad; Fitzgerald's careful accounting of his earnings; a photograph of the house on Long Island where The Great Gatsby was conceived; postcards with Fitzgerald's drawings for his daughter. These rare photos and memorabilia combine into a narrative augmented by selections from Scott's and Zelda's own writings, conveying the spirit of particular moments in their lives. As Scottie Fitzgerald Smith writes in her introduction, "We've tried hard to balance the literary with the personal, and the familiar with the more obscure . . . to make it their book, rather than a book about them."

ABOUT THE EDITORS

Matthew J. Bruccoli, the Emily Brown Jefferies Professor of English at the University of South Carolina, is the leading authority on the House of Scribner and its authors. He is the author of Some Sort of Epic Grandeur: The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald and the editorial director of the Dictionary of Literary Biography. He lives in Columbia.

Scottie Fitzgerald Smith (1921–1986) was the only child of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. She worked on the staffs of Time and the New Yorker and wrote for the New York Times and the Washington Post. Smith considered The Romantic Egoists her ultimate tribute to her parents.

The late Joan P. Kerr (1921–1996), a founding editor of American Heritage magazine, was a specialist in American art and photography.

REVIEWS

"The book is irresistible, a narrative with a strange eloquence . . ."—New York Times Book Review

"The title says it all, yet for lovers of The Great Gatsby, this is the ultimate book. From Scott's baby book to the Fitzgeralds' joint gravestone, this book is a remarkably complete pictorial record: telegrams, book jackets, bar bills, publishing statements, newspaper clippings, paintings by Zelda . . . , and endless photographs of the Fitzgeralds as they moved from the flaming flappers of Princeton and Montgomery, Alabama, to the desperate boozers of Hollywood."—Los Angeles Times

"Funny and sad, comic and tragic, this exceptional collection supplements the works by Mizener, Turnbull, and Milford, but is oddly more powerful than any book on the Fitzgeralds. A most interesting and fascinating book."—Library Journal

BOOK FLYER

Download the flyer/order form here. You will need Adobe Reader which is free from Adobe.

ALSO FROM THE EDITOR

Hemingway and The Mechanism of Fame: Statements, Public Letters, Introductions, Forewords, Prefaces, Blurbs, Reviews, and Endorsements
The Sons of Maxwell Perkins: Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe, and Their Editor
Ring Around the Bases: The Complete Baseball Stories of Ring Lardner
Some Sort of Epic Grandeur: The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Second Revised Edition
Before Gatsby: The First 26 Short Stories
To Loot My Life Clean: The Thomas Wolfe-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence
Trimalchio by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Only Thing That Counts:The Ernest Hemingway-Maxwell Perkins Correspondence
Fie! Fie! Fi-Fi!: A Facsimile of the 1914 Acting Script and the Musical Score with Illustrations from the Original Production
Readers Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tender Is the Night
F. Scott Fitzgerald on Authorship

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