WHO NEEDS OPRAH?'Gatsby' Author's Long-Lost Reading List Found Aug 3rd 2013, 16:30 Who needs Oprah? None other than F. Scott Fitzgerald reportedly concocted an undiscovered syllabus of 22 must-read books four years before his death, dictating it to a nurse assigned to save him from his impending dissolution. - SUMMARY
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• Sister Carrie, by Theodore Dreiser • The Life of Jesus, by Ernest Renan • A Doll's House, by Henrik Ibsen • Winesburg, Ohio, by Sherwood Anderson • The Old Wives' Tale, by Arnold Bennett • The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiel Hammett • The Red and the Black, by Stendahl • The Short Stories of Guy De Maupassant, translated by Michael Monahan • An Outline of Abnormal Psychology, edited by Gardner Murphy • The Stories of Anton Chekhov, edited by Robert N. Linscott • The Best American Humorous Short Stories, edited by Alexander Jessup • Victory, by Joseph Conrad • The Revolt of the Angels, by Anatole France • The Plays of Oscar Wilde • Sanctuary, by William Faulkner • Within a Budding Grove, by Marcel Proust • The Guermantes Way, by Marcel Proust • Swann's Way, by Marcel Proust • South Wind, by Norman Douglas • The Garden Party, by Katherine Mansfield • War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
Widely considered one America's greatest writers of the 20th Century and the author of the "Great Gatsby," Fitzgerald enumerated the essential books in a sort-of attempt at tutoring Dorothy Richardson, according to OpenCulture.com. Richardson, a nurse assigned to squire Fitzgerald back to sobriety by a North Carolina hotel at which he was boarding, scribbled the list on a piece of paper, a photograph of which OpenCulture.com published to their site on Friday. Fitzgerald died in late-1940, after a more-than-decade-long battle with alcoholism. He reportedly suffered two heart attacks prior to his death, and claimed to suffer from a mild bout of tuberculosis. At the top of the scribbled page, Richardson writes "These are books that Scott thought should be required reading." | |
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