F. Scott Fitzgerald

F Scott Fitzgerald 1921
F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) was born on 24 September 1896 to a salesman father and an Irish-Catholic mother who was the heir to a successful Minnesota grocery store. The F. Scott of F. Scott Fitzgerald stands for Francis Scott; he was named for his distant cousin, the writer of the poem that became the lyrics to American national anthem. Until 1908 the family moved throughout upstate New York, but when his father lost his job the Fitzgeralds moved to St. Paul, Minnesota. F Scott Fitzgerald circa 1920 [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons Scott, as family and friends knew him, had his first story published when he was 13 - a detective story printed in the school newspaper. After his expulsion for lack of academic effort, he boarded at Newman School, a Catholic school in New Jersey. After graduation in 1913, he attended Princeton University, where he wrote articles for the college humour magazine, stories for the literary magazine, and scripts for the musicals of the Triangle Club. However, again he neglected his studies; in 1917 he was placed on academic probation, and he dropped out of Princeton to join the army. Shortly before reporting for duty…
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# Resource Title Description Contributor
21 Tender is the Night
22 The Beautiful and Damned
23 The Curious Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)… Kate O'Connor
24 Lost Generation World War I, originally called the Great War, resulted in more than nine million deaths. The… Kate O'Connor
25 The Great Gatsby
26 'Tales of the Jazz Age' Illustrated Front Cover Illustrated frontcover to the 1922 edition of F Scott Fitzgerald's novel 'Tales of the Jazz Age'.…