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Autograph letter signed by FITZGERALD F. Scott - 1922

by FITZGERALD F. Scott

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Autograph letter signed by FITZGERALD F. Scott - 1922

Autograph letter signed

by FITZGERALD F. Scott

  • Used
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
1922. Signed. FITZGERALD, F. Scott. Autograph letter signed. St. Paul, Minnesota, circa May 9, 1922. Two sheets of unlined wove paper, measuring 8-1/2 by 11 inches, penned on the rectos for two pages. $22,000.Exceptional signed two-page autograph letter with excellent literary content, written entirely in F. Scott Fitzgerald's hand, to Harford Powell, an editor at Collier's, concerning mystery stories and publishing ""Benjamin Button,"" along with other novelettes and his earlier collection Flappers and Philosophers. Accompanied by Powell's typed one-page letter in response.The letter, written entirely in F. Scott Fitzgerald's hand, reads: ""Your letter was very interesting. The trouble is this: all the obvious stuff of romance & mystery while it is at the same time the best stuff has in the last twenty five years been pretty well pawed over by newspaper feature writers and detective story Shakespeares not to mention people like Doyle, Haggard, Wilkie Collins and Bulwer Lytton and the haute dime novelists. They've done their pawing with such clumsy hands that they've taken the color pretty much off the near east and the far east and the whole criminal world—and so to the sophisticated mind, as you know yourself, the appearance of Paw-paw, the three eyed with his relentless secret including Constantinople and Patterson New Jersey, bound in boards at $1.75, is apt to be the signal for hilarious mirth. The jewel business has fascinated me too and in fact I have done a satirical story on almost the materials you suggest. It appears as a novelette in the next Smart Set & wish that you'd read it. It's the second of a series of such stories of which the first was The Russet Witch in the Metropolitan & the third was Benjamin Button. ""Did you ever read my story The Cut Glass Bowl, just published in the Metropolitan and later in Flappers & Philosophers? That works out the curse idea. I will certainly keep in mind what you say and if some plan occurs to me to give an entirely new & un-shop-worn twist I'll write it up and send it to you. Sincerely, F. Scott Fitzgerald."" Powell's response concedes, in the first line, ""On second thoughts, I imagine you are right. All the same, we don't usually shy at an idea because of Wilkie Collins, Bulwer Lytton, etc. I suppose in the long and serried list of their works, pretty nearly all stories are told—with the remarkable exception of 'Benjamin Button.'"" ""Fitzgerald wrote only one story in the first half of 1922, 'The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,' which traces the life of a man who is born old and grows up into infancy. The story was hard to place, but Collier's took it for $1000"" (Bruccoli, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur, 197). Powell's typed letter has a flattened mail fold and some light edge-wear, mild toning. Fitzgerald's letter with evidence of a removed paper clip along with several pinholes from removed staples, small hole to page one, signature bold and clear.
  • Bookseller Bauman Rare Books US (US)
  • Book Condition Used
  • Quantity Available 1
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Date Published 1922

We have 3 copies available starting at €6,158.75.

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Typed letter signed "Scott," addressed to "Swanie" (literary agent H. N. Swanson). With a typed letter signed from Harold Ober to Swanson, regarding a one-time broadcast Fitzgerald's "The Dance" and retained carbon copies of two additional Harold Ober memos regarding Fitzgerald literary properties.

by FITZGERALD, F. Scott

  • Used
Condition
Used - Light creasing where folded; staple holes; otherwise fine.
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1
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Rochester, New York, United States
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Encino and New York,, May - August, 1940.. Light creasing where folded; staple holes; otherwise fine.. Various sizes. . Fitzgerald, in writing to Swanson, denies that he is ill as had been reported second hand through his daughter and Mrs. Ober. "Far from being sick, I've done twenty Esquire stories and six chapters of a novel beside the picture job I am now doing."
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€6,158.75
Typed Letter Signed

Typed Letter Signed

by FITZGERALD, F Scott

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  • Fine
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Fine
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First
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Pine Plains, New York, United States
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€11,843.75

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F. Scott Fitzgerald Typed Letter Signed with handwritten addendum, December 26th, 1939, one year almost to the day before his death. F. Scott Fitzgerald, cash-strapped near the end of his life, pleads with his landlord "with somewhat bowed shoulders" for a reduction in rent, expressing hope that a Hollywood studio will employ him soon. "Things look a little brighter. My health is better and I really think I am going to work at the studios within a week. All this illness has, however, put me in debt and it may be some months before I am straightened out." In 1920, three days after publication, the entire first printing of F Scott Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise, all 3000 copies, sold. Riding the crest of his brisk sales and enthusiastic reviews, Fitzgerald propelled himself further into the financial and cultural elite with The Beautiful and the Damned (1922), and achieved immortality with The Great Gatsby (1925). His private life with his wife Zelda captivated his engrossed readers as much as his… Read More
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€11,843.75
Typed Letter Signed [TLS]
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Typed Letter Signed [TLS]

by FITZGERALD, F. SCOTT

  • Used
  • Very Good
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Edition
First edition
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1
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New York, New York, United States
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Item Price
€33,162.50

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Baltimore, MD: np, 1934. First edition. Framed. Very Good. IMPORTANT AND REVEALING LETTER BY F. SCOTT FITZGERALD ON HIS LITERARY INFLUENCES AND GROWTH AS A WRITER. It is rare that we get to read first hand about a writer's influences, especially during the formative years, but in answer to a letter from the scholar Egbert S. Oliver, Fitzgerald - with his characteristic wit - offers us details about his early literary education. The letter, partially quoted in Matthew Bruccoli's definitive biography, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur, reads in full: 1307 Park Avenue Baltimore, Maryland January 7, 1934 Mr. Egbert S. Oliver Willamette University Salem Oregon Dear Mr. Oliver: The first help I ever had in writing in my life was from my father who read an utterly imitative Sherlock Holmes story of mine and pretended to like it. But after that I received the most invaluable aid from Mr. C. N. B. Wheeler then headmaster of the St. Paul Academy now the St. Paul Country Day School in St. Paul, Minnesota. 2.… Read More
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€33,162.50