Page 10-Saturday, July 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily Fitzgerald collection a success THE PRICE WAS HIGH: The last un- collectedEStories of F. Scott Fitzgerald; edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli; Har- court Brace Janovich, New York and London; 784 pages; $19.95. By JOCKIIENDERSON The first time I noticed more about F. Scott Fitzgerald than his name on a reading list next to The Great Gatsby was on the front page of the New York Times Book Review, in 1963, when I was 21. His letters had just been published. I recall the myth which emerged from the review quite vividly, that even though Fitzgerald had been a fiction $ETS_ writer of some merit, he was of more interest as a tragically flawed per- sonality. The reviewer insisted that he had squandered his talent, and possibly driven his wife crazy through reckless living and excessive drinking. His legend seemed almost Byronic to me then, oddly out of synchronization with society at large. It was not only his allegedly insatiable attempts to drown his eternal angst with the bottle, but the fact that he seemed foolishly poetic about women, eccentrically brash in public, and hopelessly cursed with a talent he could not endure. Of course, I had not yet read his work. However, this romantic myth of the tragic hero, F. Scott Fitzgerald, remains with us today asa fact of mass media culture. The truth is something altogether more complex. All in all, he served his talent very well. He worked a daily schedule as a professional writer right up to the end of his life. In fact, the con- troversy that surrounds his life arises from his good fortune in having ex- ploited a very fine talent, while simultaneously struggling with a broken, traumatic marriage and fragile health, neither of the latter all that rare. There is something demented about a society that can produce a writer as successful as Fitzgerald, then bestow upon him a reputation for' failure and tragedy. If Fitzgerald was a failure, then God help us all. AS A SHORT story writer in the English language, Fitzgerald was among the best of his era. I've read about 125 of the 164 stories which he wrote - with the exception of five fluke failures, they are all roughly of the same caliber of concentrated excellen- ce. The Price Was High contains 50 stories which will satisfy the average reader. Yet, in an odd way, perhaps because there are far more stories in this volume than in any other, perhaps because these are reputedly the lesser stories, this book carries a weight and balance that measures Fitzgerald's career at its roots. No critic who trained to write fiction through careful study of Fitzgerald's entire opus, and then went on to study the biography of Scott and Zelda, would be likely to deny that, asa mirror of his era, asa study of a character immersed in society, Fit- zgerald's work is unsurpassed in American letters. These stories cer- tainly strenghten that claim. FItzgerald cultivated many short story conventions that entertain the reader. He played with contrived plots, and often withheld information early in the narrative in order to add an element of surprise later. Contrary to some critical opinion, these techniques do not necessarily detract from the enduring value of a story. Yet much of the criticism of the stories in the book focuses on "happy endings" produced for the Saturday Evening Post, as if the concentrated intelligence directed into the development of his characters did not reverse the quackery of his con- trived endings into an ironic second guess about the outcome. IN FACT, the excellent quality of Fit- zgerald's work does not originate in questions of technique. He lost the ability to turn out these so-called "slick" stories in 1935 and '36, just when- his understanding of craft was most developed. The mystery of Fitzgerald's talent, perhaps of all talent, ran clear into the depths of his flesh, into the daily patterns of his lifestyle. It was inherent in his stance toward the world. The funniest and most romantic of the stories are the early ones, written before 1922. As his youthful exuberance and spontaneity dissipated, his stories began to reflect the problems of older characters. Then along with the Crash of '29, Zelda suffered her first break- down and institutionalization. After 1930, many of his short works reflected the enduring conflict with his wife and the hardship of economic depression. Each story in The Price Was High is introduced with a couple of paragraphs by the editor, Matthew Bruccoli. Often, he quotes from letters or other referen- ces which pertain to the stories' background, such as place of com- position, biographical tidbits, etc. One story, "Her Last Case," was omitted from another collection at the last moment. Here is an excerpt of the letter Fitzgerald wrote to Maxwell Perkins, his editor at Scribners, explaining his reason for the omission: "The real thing that decided me about "Her Last Case" was that it was a place story and just before seeing it in published form I ran across Thomas Wolfe's "The House of the Far and Lost" and I thought there was no chan- ce of competing with him on the same subject, when he had brought off such a triumph. There would inevitably have been invidious comparisons. If my story had anything to redeem it, except atmosphere, I would not hesitate to in- clude it, but most of it depends on a mixture of hysteria and sentiment - anyhow, I did not decide without some thought." I was curious enough to hunt down Wolfe's story. Fitzgerald could not have been entirely accurate about the inevitable "invidiousacomparison" between the two pieces of fiction. Wolfe's piece is a series of melancholy vignettes in the life of Eugene Gant in England. Wolfe's florid and profuse prose strains for much different effects than "Her Last Case" which is set in Virginia, does. In most respects, the two works differ sharply. Wolfe does not concern himself with the day-to-day continuity of events in the hero's life, whereas Fitzgerald always maintains an active story line, in this case, "Will the nurse-heroine be able to love the hero?" Perhaps Fitzgerald felt that he had betrayed his real experience with a romantic optimism, and that Wolfe had not. Eugene Gant's relations with the opposite sex are pitifully incomplete. Like Eugene Gant, the hero of "Her Last Case," Ben Dragonet, is a broken, solitary individual. The nurse who visits him does seem to bring a fan- tastic salvation. But even if Fitzgerald had regretted his happy ending, he could have changed it to a hopeless story by altering several words in the last sentence, "She was worrying how she could most kindly break the news to Howard that her last case was going to last forever." Had the name been "Ben" instead of "Howard," had "one week" been substituted for "forever," it would mean the hero had lost, not won, the love of the nurse. THE ENDURING traits of Fit- zgerald's stories recall thedistinction sometimes made between the short story schools of de Maupassant and Chekhov. In the former, as in Fit- zgerald's, there is a strong story line, a resolved plot, events which are sometimes summarized quickly, and characters who develop through action. In the latter, the narration inclines to the episodic, to the slice of life, and to the expression of subtle changes in mood or attitude in the character. The "stream of consciousness" or detailed internal perspective of a single charac- ter does not appear at all in Fit- zgerald's work. In this respect, he was a mainstream American, without much confidence in the product of an in- telligence that was not pragmatic about ambition, status, and work. The only first-person piece, "The Bowl", develops in a lively college at- mosphere at Princeton, while telling the story of a classic football hero, Dolly Harlan, the narrator's room- mate. In retrospect, the narrator relates how Harlan played football in his senior year, even though he had not fully recovered from a broken ankle and though his cosmopolitan fiancee threw him over because she disliked football. In the climactic big game in the Yale Bowl of the title, Harlan scores the touchdown which brings the under- dog Princeton eleven a tie. At several points in this story, I was reminded that Fitzgerald is sometimes said to have in- fluenced Salinger. The narrator's cagey attitude toward Harlan's aggressive, manlike traits and his ad- mitted heartfelt need for participation in the team spirit, show the generosity which helped to make Fitzgerald an outstanding writer. In closing, I would advise any serious reader to ignore the verdict that these stories are "uneven in quality" or "of lesser quality." Fitzgerald did not have Faulkner's experimental emphasis, nor Lawrence's intensely fanatic reach towards the roots of the unconscious. He was not as likely to uncover the rhythmic subtleties and geometric per- spectives that cast the reader toward the formal possibilities of literature as he was to invite one to contemplate a real society. In this sense, his variety is not due to his sycophantic comprehen- sion of literary form; but rather to his sense of duty to set characters in a lived drama, with roles that comprehend the full demands placed upon the human individual. Free concert The piano and flute works of Franz Schubert canbe heard live tonight in the Union's Pendleton Room. Piano doctoral student Andrew Anderson will host a guest floutist, and the two will play both individually and as a duo. In addition to Schubert's works, a new composition by former U. student Laurie Clayton will be performed. The concert begins at 7:30 and will last ap- proximately an hour. Admission is complimentary. Felch Park Entertainment by Orchestra Members Ban by Alice Childress Opens Tonight 8pm uch Hpy Ado Fever AA b ut WyiNoelld- NnA g Coward by William lDShakespeare byEugene O'Neill IN REPERTORY AT POWER CENTER July 13-22 & Aug. 1-5 Power Center Box Office opens at 6pm. 763-3333. Mi. Rep '79 Ticket Office: weekdays noon to 5 in the Michigan League. 764-0450 # ? .-