The Last Tycoon

The Last Tycoon by Francis Scott Fitzgerald is a novel that explores the glittering decadence of Hollywood during its heyday. Published by Penguin Books in 1965, this new edition spans 196 pages and is presented in English. The narrative centers on Stahr, a tragic tycoon hero who navigates a world rife with business, alcohol, and promiscuity, all while grappling with his own cynicism and vulnerability.
Readers will find a vivid portrayal of the motion picture industry and the complexities of life in Hollywood during the thirties. Fitzgerald’s sharp prose and steely simplicity provide a critical lens on the era, as Stahr confronts the moral ambiguities of filmmaking and the elusive nature of love. This edition offers a poignant farewell to the Great American Dream, encapsulating the bittersweet essence of Fitzgerald’s final work.
Official synopsis Publisher
A novel of the glittering decadence of Hollywood in its heyday, this was Fitzgerald’s last work and he died without completing it. The novel’s tragic tycoon hero is Stahr. Caught in the crossfire of his own effortless cynicism and his silent, secret vulnerability, Stahr inhabits a world dominated by business, alcohol and promiscuity. If there is a moral or social necessity to film-making in this West Coast never-never land, Stahr does not always believe in it. If there is love he does not always see it. The sharpness of Fitzgerald’s prose, the steely simplicity of his style, give a cutting edge to this study of Hollywood in the thirties, from which Fitzgerald draws a painfully bitter-sweet love affair and bids his own poignant farewell to the Great American Dream.
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