Flappers and Philosophers
Flappers and Philosophers is a collection of eight short stories by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, published in 1920 by Charles Scribner's Sons. Each of the stories had originally appeared, independently, in either The Saturday Evening Post, ''Scribner's Magazine, or The Smart Set''.
The volume includes "The Ice Palace", regarded as one of Fitzgerald's finest short works.
Stories
The original periodical publication and date are indicated.- "The Offshore Pirate"
- "The Ice Palace"
- "Head and Shoulders" , February 19, 1920
- "The Cut-Glass Bowl" , May 1920
- "Bernice Bobs Her Hair"
- "Benediction"
- "Dalyrimple Goes Wrong"
- "The Four Fists"
Background
The stories published in Nassau Literary Review while Fitzgerald was attending Princeton University, as well as those that comprise Flappers and Philosophers, may be placed among his "apprenticeship fiction."In November 1919, Fitzgerald engaged Harold Ober as his literary agent. By early 1920, Ober had negotiated the sale of six of Fitzgerald's stories to The Saturday Evening Post, one of several "high-paying mass-circulation slick-paper magazines". Fitzgerald was paid $400 for each story. Fitzgerald's short fiction became identified with the Post in the following years, to whom he would sell sixty-five of his stories—"40 percent of his output."
Literary critic and biographer Matthew J. Bruccoli notes that "during his lifetime, Fitzgerald was far better known and more widely read as a short story writer than as a novelist."