Paperback cover of the 2002 updated edition of Some Sort of Epic Grandeur, by Matthew J. Bruccoli. On the Fitzgerald book shelf, of course. (Photo by Mark C. Taylor) |
Matthew J. Bruccoli, 1931-2008. |
Matthew J. Bruccoli was the leading scholar on the life and
work of F. Scott Fitzgerald. During his long career, Bruccoli wrote or edited
over 30 books related to Fitzgerald. Bruccoli’s biography of Fitzgerald, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur: The Lift of F.
Scott Fitzgerald was originally published in 1981. Bruccoli updated the
book in 1991 and again in 2002. Some Sort
of Epic Grandeur is the definitive biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald, in
part because of Bruccoli’s masterful command of the facts of Fitzgerald’s life.
Bruccoli traces Fitzgerald’s life from his birth in Saint
Paul, Minnesota in 1896, to his death in Hollywood in 1940. He keeps track of
Fitzgerald’s peripatetic lifestyle, and one of the most useful tools is the
chronology in the beginning of the book that traces Scott and Zelda’s movements
from one place to another.
Some Sort of Epic
Grandeur is a sympathetic biography of Fitzgerald, but that doesn’t mean
that Bruccoli makes excuses for Scott’s behavior. By all accounts, Fitzgerald
was a charming man when sober. When he drank, however, his personality totally
changed and he was often aggressive and belligerent. Bruccoli doesn’t revel in
stories about Scott’s alcoholic dissipation, but he doesn’t downplay it either.
Bruccoli has a deep appreciation for Fitzgerald’s writing,
and he’s a good judge of the highs and lows of Fitzgerald’s work. Bruccoli is
no fanboy apologist telling you that this obscure short story from 1936 is actually
the best thing Scott ever wrote. In fact, Bruccoli is quite critical of
Fitzgerald’s short fiction of the mid-1930’s, as Fitzgerald had seemingly lost
his creative spark.
Although today Fitzgerald is best-known for his novels The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night, during his lifetime
his short stories made him a lot more money. For example, in 1929, Fitzgerald
earned $27,000 for eight short stories that he sold to The Saturday Evening Post but he earned just $31.71 in book
royalties! Fitzgerald hoped that the money he earned from short stories would
buy him time to work on his novels. However, it didn’t always work out that
way. As Bruccoli writes, “He was a methodical planner all his professional
life, preparing schedules and charts for his work; that he rarely kept to these
plans did not discourage him from making them.” (p.143)
One of the enduring myths about Fitzgerald was that he was a
“natural writer,” someone who had an abundance of God-given talent, but not the
intelligence to make the most out of that talent. Bruccoli soundly punctures
that myth, in part by showing what a dedicated editor Fitzgerald was.
Fitzgerald made significant changes to The
Great Gatsby when it was in galley form, and he persevered through seventeen drafts of Tender Is the Night. (Bruccoli’s very first book about Fitzgerald
was The Composition of Tender Is the
Night.)
Bruccoli also shows us how Fitzgerald’s own friends and
contemporaries denigrated his intelligence. Edmund Wilson, who met Fitzgerald
at Princeton, “never broke the habit of patronizing Fitzgerald. Although his
affection was genuine, Wilson was unable to believe Fitzgerald was a major
writer—in
fact, a greater figure than himself.” (p.169)
The Great Gatsby failed
to meet Scott’s hopes for a blockbuster best-seller. It sold about 20,000
copies, less than 10% of what it now sells in a year in the United States, and
Fitzgerald made more money from selling the movie rights to the novel than he
did on royalties. Scott and Zelda’s life, never a model of stability, now took
a darker turn. Scott began introducing himself as an alcoholic to people he was
meeting for the first time. (p.251) When Zelda felt that Scott was flirting too
much with the ballerina Isadora Duncan she threw herself down a flight of stone
steps. (p.252) Bruccoli writes of the Fitzgeralds: “Having gone to France to
escape the distractions of New York, they now returned to America to escape the
dissipations of France.” (p.254) This reminded me of what Scott prophetically
wrote in a 1926 letter: “Wherever you go, you take yourselves and your faults
with you. In the mountains or in the city, you make the same things happen.” (Fool for Love, by Scott Donaldson,
p.172)
Bruccoli writes of Fitzgerald in 1933-4, as he was
struggling to finish Tender Is the Night:
“Heretofore, despite his self-indulgences, he had believed
in his destiny and in his ability to preserve the best part of his genius. Now,
struggling with his novel and grinding out unfelt stories, he came to feel that
he was starting out all over again without the confident illusions that had
sustained him in 1920.” (p.355)
After Zelda’s third mental breakdown in 1934, Scott knew
that it was extremely unlikely they would ever live together again. I think
that contributed to Scott’s depression during these years and was part of the
reason why Fitzgerald’s mid-1930’s short stories are so uneven. Fitzgerald was
clearly floundering, searching for material anywhere he could possibly get it.
In the same year he published the beautiful and heartfelt novel Tender Is the Night, he was also writing
a mediocre and hackneyed screen treatment for George Burns and Gracie Allen
titled “Gracie at Sea.” (“Gracie at Sea” was eventually published in the 2017 collection I’d Die for You.)
Bruccoli continually unearths interesting tidbits about
Fitzgerald. For example: just before Fitzgerald went to Hollywood in 1937 to
work as a screenwriter for M-G-M, he briefly considered an offer to host a
radio show that toured college campuses. (p.416) If Fitzgerald could have
remained sober, it might have been a decent job for him, since he was funny,
intelligent, and charming, but if had been drinking, it would have been a total
train wreck.
Fitzgerald worked hard in Hollywood, but he found
screenwriting challenging. During the last year of his life, he planned and
began writing a novel about a movie producer. At the time of Fitzgerald’s death
in December of 1940, he had accumulated more than 1,100 pages of drafts, along
with 200 pages of background material. “None of the episodes was regarded as
final,” showing again what a painstaking reviser Fitzgerald was. (p.472) The
unfinished novel, published in 1941 as The Last Tycoon, was the very beginning of the Fitzgerald revival and
reevaluation of his talent.
Fitzgerald was a true artist of remarkable grace and skill,
and it seems fitting to let him have the final word. In an April, 1934 letter
to H.L. Mencken, Fitzgerald wrote: “It is simply that having once found the intensity
of art, nothing else that can happen in life can ever again seem as important
as the creative process.” (p.368)
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