The Beautiful and Damned

mass market paperback, 432 pages

Published June 25, 2002 by Brand: Scribner, Simon & Schuster.

ISBN:
978-0-7434-5150-5
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4 stars (12 reviews)

5 editions

Review of 'The Beautiful and Damned' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Fitzgerald at his best. Fitzgerald's first major publication, This Side of Paradise, was defined by the author's hasty and slap-dash amalgamation of numerous short stories into a somewhat cohesive novel. The Great Gatsby illuminates the immorality of the hedonistic rich in the "Roaring 20s" but does not have a lot of character development and depth. The Beautiful and Damned, however, is Fitzgerald's most poignant and comprehensive exploration of hedonism among the nouveau riche in Manhattan during the 1910s-1920s, and the deleterious effects the "pursuit of pleasure" has on people in the modern world.

In the Beautiful and Damned, Fitzgerald introduces us to two principal characters—Anthony Patch and Gloria Gilbert. Patch is the grandson of Adam Patch, a progressive philanthropist and former industrialist worth some 40 million dollars. Enter Gloria Gilbert, the cousin of Anthony's Harvard pal and a consummate dilettante whose self-worth is entirely wrapped up in the charms that …

Review of 'The Beautiful and Damned' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

 I'm recovering from recent major surgery and this book was exactly the book I needed. Not because of any message it has for people like me but because of the amount of concentration it requires to read it.
The plot isn't so complex, but it requires concentration because it's so beautifully written. You really want to take your time with it, and I'm a little sorry I finished it.
 Oh, when you read it, make sure you've gotten the title right (many don't): It's The Beautiful and Damned, not The Beautiful and the Damned.
 Does it really matter? you ask. Yes, it does. It really matters. Read it and you'll understand.

Review of 'The Beautiful and Damned' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

In letters to John Peale Bishop and his uncle Phil McQuillan, Fitzgerald said that in The Beautiful and the Damned he’d paid much more attention to detail and that, as a result, this book was “much more carefully written than the first one” (the first one being This Side of Paradise). But in a letter to Carl Hovey, the editor of Metropolitan Magazine, where an edited and much cut version of The Beautiful and the Damned was serialized, Fitzgerald worried that it was “a bitter and insolent book that I fear will never be popular and that will undoubtedly offend a lot of people.”

Fitzgerald once described his novels as being “pessimistic,” and The Beautiful and the Damned is certainly that, and then some. However, despite Fitzgerald’s fears, it is a triumph on many levels, particularly in the textures he applies to the characters and their relationships. This is …

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