Book Review – The Popular Girl by F.Scott Fitzgerald
Hespersus Press - £7.99 – ISBN 1-84391-403-4 – 136 Pages
‘The Popular Girl’ collects together 5 of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s lesser-known short stories. Like his better-known works ‘The Great Gatsby’, ‘Tender is the Night’ and ‘The Last Tycoon’ these stories are rich in character, with an elegant structure, and look at love and money, and how both gaining and losing each of them can have an impact on people’s lives.
‘The Popular Girl’ looks at the façade built up by Yanci Bowman, brought low and impoverished by her Father’s untimely death, and her efforts to impress Scott Kimberly, the wealthy and handsome man she has just met. She wants to prove to him that she is still ‘The Popular Girl’ he first met, making up friendships and parties that she can’t afford to go to.
‘Love in the Night’ looks at the life of Val, what it is like to be half American and half Russian, how this has affected his life, and falling in love, and how his parent’s marriage is not how he might have imagined it to be.
The remaining three stories ‘The Swimmers’, ‘A New Leaf’, and ‘What a Handsome Pair!’ are worth the read, and examine similar themes and ideas.
This is a collection that is well worth looking out for, to find some lesser-known work by one of America’s undisputed greatest 20th Century writers.