Paperback cover of The Apprentice Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald, edited by John Kuehl, 1965. That's one of my Fitzgerald shelves. (Photo by Mark C. Taylor) |
F. Scott Fitzgerald, probably taken during his time at Princeton. |
The Apprentice Fiction
of F. Scott Fitzgerald, edited by John Kuehl and first published in 1965,
collects Fitzgerald’s first 15 short stories, written from 1909-1917. The
stories take us through Fitzgerald’s school career, from Saint Paul Academy to
the Newman School, a prestigious Catholic prep academy in New Jersey, to
Princeton University, which Fitzgerald left in 1917 before completing his
degree. (Fitzgerald was posthumously awarded an honorary diploma from the
Princeton class of 2017.)
Fitzgerald was very selective about the short stories that
he selected for the collections that were published during his lifetime, so he
might be annoyed if he knew that future generations of readers could pore over
his prep school works. However, as juvenile as some of these stories might be,
they do give us some insight into the future of Fitzgerald’s writing career.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s very first appearance in print was at
the age of 13 in the October, 1909 issue of Now
and Then, the school newspaper of Saint Paul Academy. His short story “The
Mystery of the Raymond Mortgage” was included in that issue. It was something
of an inauspicious debut, as the readers of the detective story never actually
learn who stole the titular mortgage. The story could almost be read as a
parody of detective stories, as the mystery of the mortgage remains unsolved.
However, it’s more likely that the shortcomings of the plot stem from the youth
of the author, rather than a deliberate attempt on Fitzgerald’s part to parody
the conventions of detective stories.
By the time Fitzgerald wrote “A Luckless Santa Claus,” in
1912 he had learned more about grabbing the reader’s attention. The first
sentence of the story is: “Miss Harmon was responsible for the whole thing.” (p.48)
Instantly, your curiosity is piqued. What whole thing is Miss Harmon
responsible for?
Lifelong preoccupations of Fitzgerald’s surface in these
early stories. His second story, published in the February, 1910 issue of Now and Then, is “Reade, Substitute
Right Half.” It’s a brief sketch that shows us how a scrawny youth wins
recognition for his stellar play on the football field. Fitzgerald longed for
glory of his own on the athletic fields, but at 5 foot 8 and of slender build,
it was unlikely that he would succeed at football. (According to F. Scott Fitzgerald in Minnesota: Toward the
Summit, he weighed 138 pounds. P.77) One of Fitzgerald’s keenest
disappointments during his college years was that he didn’t make the Princeton
football team. While football never became a major theme in Fitzgerald’s work,
he remained a devoted fan of the sport his whole life. When he suffered his
fatal heart attack on December 21, 1940, he was reading and annotating his copy
of the Princeton Alumni Weekly, making
notes about the current Princeton football team.
Fitzgerald’s interest in the Civil War shows up in his
stories “A Debt of Honor,” and “The Room with the Green Blinds.” Fitzgerald was
somewhat torn between the North and the South. He was raised in the North, in Minnesota
and New York, but his father’s family was from Maryland, a border state that
remained in the Union but retained slavery and had many Southern sympathizers.
Fitzgerald was always drawn towards lost causes, and he seems to have retained a
romantic vision of a languid Southern aristocracy. And, of course, he married a
Southern belle, Zelda Sayre, from Montgomery, Alabama. Zelda’s family was well
entrenched in the Old South—her father was a Justice on the
Alabama Supreme Court.
The weirdest story in The
Apprentice Fiction is “Tarquin of Cheepside,” later revised and reprinted
in Fitzgerald’s 1922 short story collection Tales
of the Jazz Age. The story describes a young man’s flight from angry
pursuers, and the friend who shelters him. Although the man who is fleeing
remains unnamed, we learn that he had assaulted a woman. Once the pursuers have
left, the young man starts writing a poem—“The Rape of Lucrece.” The
young man is William Shakespeare! Fitzgerald is calling the greatest writer of
all time a rapist! Didn’t anticipate that plot twist! The writing in “Tarquin”
is impressionistic and poetic, but I would guess that the subject matter irked
some readers.
Fitzgerald’s interest in the theater is also on display in
his early stories. As a teenager, he wrote four plays for the Elizabethan
Dramatic Club, a group of young amateur actors in Saint Paul. Fitzgerald also
contributed to several shows for the Triangle Club, Princeton University’s dramatic
club. “Shadow Laurels,” from April 1915, is presented as a play, complete with
stage directions. There’s a marvelous line in it, as one of the characters
says, “He was bright and clever—when we worked, he worked feverishly
hard, but he was always drunk, night and day.” (p.74) The same could be said of
F. Scott Fitzgerald himself.
The Princeton short story “Babes in the Woods” later shows
up as Amory and Isabelle’s initial meeting in Fitzgerald’s first novel, This Side of Paradise, published in
March of 1920. A line in the story “Sentiment—and the Use of Rouge” is later
repeated in This Side of Paradise, as
Eleanor is asked if she is a sentimentalist. She replies, “No, I’m a romantic.
There’s a huge difference; a sentimental person thinks things will last, a
romantic person hopes they won’t.” (p.150) This quote seems to be an apt
description of Fitzgerald himself.
“The Pierian Springs and the Last Straw” is a very
interesting story. I read the characters of Uncle George and Mrs. Fulham as
portraits of Scott and his lost love, Ginevra King. That might be too much of a
stretch, but Fitzgerald got much of his inspiration from his own life. Ginevra
King was one of the most famous debutantes of the era. She was from a wealthy
family in Lake Forest, Illinois. King and Fitzgerald dated a few times, but
later in life she didn’t even remember if she had kissed him or not. Their
relationship was mainly through letters. Scott kept all of Ginevra’s letters to
him, and later had them bound into a book. The book was 227 pages long. Ginevra
didn’t keep any of Scott’s letters to her. Many Fitzgerald biographers believe
that Ginevra was the model for Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby.
Throughout The
Apprentice Fiction you see Fitzgerald working out what will become his classic
themes—class,
status, money, love, drinking. There are flashes of good writing and insight,
but also clunky sentences and hackneyed plots. There are no real hints that the
author of the stories in The Apprentice Fiction
will become one of the major American authors of the 20th century.
However, you can see that Fitzgerald has progressed a long way from the juvenilia
at the beginning of the book.
I wouldn’t recommend The
Apprentice Fiction for casual readers of Fitzgerald’s work, but it’s a very
useful collection for readers interested in Fitzgerald’s youthful writings.
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