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Books with author Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

  • Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A New Collection

    Matthew J. Bruccoli

    Hardcover (Scribner, Oct. 18, 1989)
    This new collection of forty-three sparkling masterpieces is the first to reflect the phenomenal Fitzgerald revival and reappraisal over the past four decades.
  • The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A New Collection

    F. Scott Fitzgerald, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

    Library Binding
    None
  • The Great Gatsby

    F. Scott Fitzgerald, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

    Hardcover (Scribner, June 1, 1996)
    The exemplary novel of the Jazz Age, F. Scott Fitzgeralds' third book, The Great Gatsby (1925), stands as the supreme achievement of his career. T. S. Eliot read it three times and saw it as the "first step" American fiction had taken since Henry James; H. L. Mencken praised "the charm and beauty of the writing," as well as Fitzgerald's sharp social sense; and Thomas Wolfe hailed it as Fitzgerald's "best work" thus far. The story of the fabulously wealthy Jay Gatsby and his love for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, of lavish parties on Long Island at a time when, The New York Times remarked, "gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession," it is an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s that resonates with the power of myth. A novel of lyrical beauty yet brutal realism, of magic, romance, and mysticism, The Great Gatsby is one of the great classics of twentieth-century literature. This is the definitive, textually accurate edition of The Great Gatsby, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli and authorized by the estate of F. Scott Fitzgerald. The first edition of The Great Gatsby contained many errors resulting from Fitzgerald's extensive revisions and a rushed production schedule, and subsequent editions introduced further departures from the author's intentions. This critical edition draws on the manuscript and surviving proofs of the novel, along with Fitzgerald's later revisions and corrections, to restore the text to its original form. It is The Great Gatsby as Fitzgerald intended it.
  • Main Street

    Sinclair Lewis, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

    Paperback (Carroll & Graf Pub, April 1, 1996)
    After moving with her new husband to the small midwestern town of Gopher Prairie, Minnesota, one woman struggles to reveal the compancent mediocrity and self-seeking hypocritical conventions that lie behind the town's respectable facade. Reprint.
  • The Sun Also Rises

    Ernest Hemingway, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

    (Omnigraphics Inc, Jan. 1, 1990)
    Paris in the twenties: Pernod, parties and expatriate Americans, loose-living on money from home. Jake is wildly in love with Brett Ashley, aristocratic and irresistibly beautiful, with an abandoned, sensuous nature that she cannot change. When the couple drift to Spain to the dazzle of the fiesta and the heady atmosphere of the Bullfight, their affair is strained by new passions, new jealousies, and Jake must finally learn that he will never possess the woman that he loves.
  • The short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald : a new collection

    F. Scott Fitzgerald, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

    Unknown Binding (NY: Scribner's, 89, March 15, 1989)
    None