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[AEJ]≡ [PDF] May Day Fitzgerald Francis Scott Edibooks Books

May Day Fitzgerald Francis Scott Edibooks Books



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This somewhat unpleasant tale, published as a novelette in the "Smart Set" in July, 1920, relates a series of events which took place in the spring of the previous year. Each of the three events made a great impression upon me. In life they were unrelated, except by the general hysteria of that spring which inaugurated the Age of Jazz, but in my story I have tried, unsuccessfully I fear, to weave them into a pattern—a pattern which would give the effect of those months in New York as they appeared to at least one member of what was then the younger generation.

May Day Fitzgerald Francis Scott Edibooks Books

Fitzgerald does an excellent job of comparing and contrasting class and culture in immediate post-World War I America. He gives us glimpses into the lives of the Ivy League elite juxtaposed against the masses of demobilizing soldiers and just ordinary New Yorkers. Fitzgerald alerts us to the first Red Scare in U.S. history. Readers who are not students of history may not be aware of how the Red Scare came about. President Woodrow Wilson earlier had pushed through Congress the Sedition Act of 1918, which targeted anarchists and radicals (mostly of non-American birth). The act was followed by the so-called Palmer Raids, named after Wilson's U.S. Attorney General. Later U.S. Supreme Court judge Felix Frankfurter characterized the raids as "illegal acts" and "wanton violence," and documented multiple violations of the Bill of Rights by federal agents. Mayday protests in 1919 were organized by the Socialist Party and other leftist groups to protest the trial and imprisonment (on ten counts of sedition) of Eugene Debs "the Lincoln of labor," who dared speak out against U.S. Involvement in World War I. The protests of 1919 were countered by right-wing riots, often led by reactionary agent-provocateurs. The most famous Mayday riot was in Cleveland, Ohio, where casualties numbered two dead, forty injured, and 116 arrests. Order was only restored after the U.S. Army was called in. F. Scott Fitzgerald hints at this historic backdrop in his focus on the social and cultural life of the time. This is a superb read.

Product details

  • Paperback 62 pages
  • Publisher CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (July 9, 2016)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 153518874X

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May Day Fitzgerald Francis Scott Edibooks Books Reviews


Reason for Reading I've decided to try the publisher's club for 6 months and plan to read the two selections, the month following their arrival. Hence this is my January read.

I've read several of Fitzgerald's novels and short stories and find him an interesting author. This title was new for me and I looked forward to reading it. The story is explained as a sample of American class systems but I'm not sure I agree with that. Class structure doesn't really exist in America the same way it does in Britain which I am more familiar with, where your class was a birthright. Americans earned there way to their class level but then there was (and still is) the problem of the youth, the ones who didn't earn their way into the social position they find themselves.

Anyway this story revolves around several groups of people from different walks of life who all ultimately intermingle one fateful May Day evening and the reader is thrown into their mindsets, thoughts and actions when given the freedom to act of their own free will. We also see how the end of WWI and the return to 'civilization' has affected these people. The young college men who left to fight the war, some come back the same, others changed. Some still belong to their social status, others have lost it and the main character of this story is a young man who has lost his money, his status, his morals and his self-respect. He has gotten himself in desperate trouble with a lady (what exactly is not mentioned, but it is not hard to imagine) The woman is presented as malicious, until we actually meet her near the end of the story. Socialist journalists and carefree debutantes clash with freshly returned soldiers from the lower ranks, marking two extremes in ideology. All come together in the end where death and tragedy ensue but sympathy (mine at least) does not lie with the one who it is perhaps intended to lie with. I think the person most injured in this whole tale is the poor woman who had the unfortunate fate of falling in love with the young college man. An intriguing story!
This was a very dark story set in post WWI. It is about the haves who avoided the war and continue to live a self-indulgent lifestyle and the soldiers who have returned from the war. It was probably accurate but very hard to read.
Good read. Very interesting but not as dark as I thought it would be, based on the other reviews. When I read the last page I thought there would be another chapter. 4/5 because I was hoping to find out more.
In the spring of 1919, the world was recovering from the catastrophe of World War I, which had ended with an armistice in November of 1918. The Paris Peace Conference had begun in January of 1919 which would result in the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in June. The economic inequities of the Gilded Age had been exacerbated by the war, but the working class soldiers, who had borne the heaviest burden, were returning home and were no longer complacent. The war had taken its toll on the social fabric of society. There had been a communist revolution in Russia and there was unrest everywhere else in the world including the United States. Socialists, Communists, and Anarchists were agitating against the status quo in cities across the United States. In April, at least thirty bombs had been sent by mail to a cross-section of prominent public figures - politicians, businessmen, and newspaper editors - by anarchists. The bombs were intended to explode on May 1, the official day of international solidarity for the Socialist and Communist movements. Several of them were detected early and because of their distinctive packaging, the Postal Service was able to recover the rest of them before they had reached their intended targets.

When May 1st came, the worst riot was in Cleveland, but there were demonstrations in other cities as well, New York included. F. Scott Fitzgerald was there to witness the mayhem. The Armistice had ended his military service without him ever being sent to fight and he was now struggling to make a living in the advertising business. Unlike his Princeton classmates, he was not among the sons of wealth who attended college in those days and he had to earn a living. Throughout his life, he had moved among that privileged class but he was not a member. His father had been a failed businessman. His mother had some small inherited wealth that kept him in private schools and in all the right social circles and had finally gotten him to Princeton, but he now had to work for a living. Perhaps because of that experience and his upbringing among that social class, he wasn't particularly suited to working for a living. It was that lack of prospects that had prompted his fiancé to break off their engagement until he could prove he had the means to support her. He wasn't making it in advertising and things didn't look good for him.

In the fall and winter of 1919, F. Scott Fitzgerald was anxiously awaiting the publication of his first novel, This Side of Paradise. The publishing contract with Scribner's had come in just the nick of time for Fitzgerald. Earlier in that year he had tried his hand in the advertising business and met with failure. Unable to prove that he could support his fiancé, Zelda Sayre of Montgomery Alabama whom he had met when he was a soldier, the engagement had been broken off. With the offering of a publishing contract by Scribner's that fall, Fitzgerald could now claim to be a professional writer and the engagement was back on. No matter how badly things turned out for Scott and Zelda later on, at that moment in time, he had a book coming out and had won the heart of the love of his life. Things were looking up. It had to be the most exciting and optimistic time of his life.

With Fitzgerald, however, happiness and satisfaction never came easy. He was always his own worst critic not only of his writing but of his own self-worth, and he always felt as though he was living on the edge of failure and tragedy was always looking over his shoulder. To both his credit and to his later downfall, he embraced his self-doubt and forged it into art. In one of his first efforts as a fulltime writer, he wrote the most ambitious work of his early career, the novella May Day, inspired by his fears of failure and by the riotous events that he witnessed earlier in that year in New York City.

In retrospect, This Side of Paradise, isn't very good, even for a first novel. Today, it serves as a testament to Max Perkins' judgment and intuition in identifying literary talent and to Scribner's willingness to invest and nurture a young writer. This Side of Paradise was successful and made Fitzgerald famous, but today it serves mainly as a biographical curiosity; the investment that Scribner's made in the young Fitzgerald wouldn't pay off for the publisher until long after both Fitzgerald and Perkins had died.

May Day serves as a sort of missing link between the young embryonic talent first noticed by Perkins and the accomplished novelist he would become. We can see him experimenting with naturalism as well as notice prototypes for the characters and themes of his later work the poor outsider among the wealthy and privileged, the beautiful but shallow heroine, the ruthless and selfish rich. The main character's financial failure parallels Fitzgerald's failure in advertising as well as the heroin's rejection parallels Zelda's initial rejection. The novella also contains the some of th most pointed social and political statements that Fitzgerald ever committed to paper. His writing was very much "in the moment" and influenced by his personal circumstances, but it foreshadowed the riotous decade that would follow. This novella and his masterpiece "Babylon Revisited" serve as bookends to the 1920's.
Fitzgerald does an excellent job of comparing and contrasting class and culture in immediate post-World War I America. He gives us glimpses into the lives of the Ivy League elite juxtaposed against the masses of demobilizing soldiers and just ordinary New Yorkers. Fitzgerald alerts us to the first Red Scare in U.S. history. Readers who are not students of history may not be aware of how the Red Scare came about. President Woodrow Wilson earlier had pushed through Congress the Sedition Act of 1918, which targeted anarchists and radicals (mostly of non-American birth). The act was followed by the so-called Palmer Raids, named after Wilson's U.S. Attorney General. Later U.S. Supreme Court judge Felix Frankfurter characterized the raids as "illegal acts" and "wanton violence," and documented multiple violations of the Bill of Rights by federal agents. Mayday protests in 1919 were organized by the Socialist Party and other leftist groups to protest the trial and imprisonment (on ten counts of sedition) of Eugene Debs "the Lincoln of labor," who dared speak out against U.S. Involvement in World War I. The protests of 1919 were countered by right-wing riots, often led by reactionary agent-provocateurs. The most famous Mayday riot was in Cleveland, Ohio, where casualties numbered two dead, forty injured, and 116 arrests. Order was only restored after the U.S. Army was called in. F. Scott Fitzgerald hints at this historic backdrop in his focus on the social and cultural life of the time. This is a superb read.
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