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- Tender Is The Night
-
-
- (April 16, 1934)
-
- Author F. Scott Fitzgerald calls his story a "romance." its
- effect on the reader is painful. Unfriendly critics might damn
- it in words from its own pages: "...The absurdity of the story
- rested in the immaturity of the attitude combined with the
- sophisticated method of its narration." But to the plain reader,
- his critical judgment softened by the glittering persuasiveness
- of Fitzgerald's writing, Tender Is the Night will be exciting
- in spite of its bitterness, moving in spite of its morbid
- sentiment. It will not be ranked as a great U.S. novel, and as
- a document of the post-War generation it has been anticipated
- by The Sun Also Rises. But it will not damp the expectations of
- Fitzgerald's admirers. Once again he has issued a promise that
- is more exciting than most of his contemporaries' achievements.
-
- Princeton, which he left in 1917 to join the U.S. Army, still
- remembers Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald and is not quite sure
- whether to be proud of him or not. Perennial undergraduate,
- projecting the roistering side of his bright college years into
- grownup life, he has been the guiding spirit and principal actor
- in many an epic junket. He spent all of his freshman year at
- college writing a show for the Triangle Club, which was
- accepted, and then tutored in the subjects he had failed so that
- he could come back and act in it. In the Army he wrote his first
- novel, The Romantic Egotist, which was rejected. After trying
- his hand at advertising in Manhattan he went home to St. Paul,
- wrote his novel over again, called it This Side of Paradise. It
- was an immediate success. He became the accredited spokesman of
- the jazz generation, his book the bible of the 'flappers' and
- 'snakes' of his day.
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-