Unfinished at the time of his death F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Last Tycoon" is a story of doomed love set against the extravagance of America's booming film industry. This " Penguin Modern Classics" edition is edited with an introduction by Edmund Wilson. The studio lot looks like 'thirty acres of fairyland' the night that a mysterious woman stands & smiles at Monroe Stahr the last of the great Hollywood princes. Enchanted by one another they begin a passionate but hopeless love affair starting with a fast-moving seduction as slick as a scene from one of Stahr's pictures. The romance unfolds frame by frame watched by Cecilia a thoroughly modern girl who has taken her lessons in sentiment & cynicism from all the movies she has seen. Her buoyant humour & satirical eye perfectly complement Fitzgerald's panorama of Hollywood at its most lavish & bewitching. F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) has acquired a mythical status in American literary history & his masterwork " The Great Gatsby" is considered by many to be the 'great American novel'. In 1920 he married Zelda Sayre dubbed 'the first American Flapper' & their traumatic marriage & Zelda's gradual descent into insanity became the leading influence on his writing. As well as many short stories Fitzgerald wrote five novels " This Side of Paradise" " The Great Gatsby" " The Beautiful & the Damned" " Tender is the Night" & incomplete at the time of his death " The Last Tycoon". After his death " The New York Times" said of him that 'in fact & in the literary sense he created a "generation"'. If you enjoyed " The Last Tycoon" you might enjoy Fitzgerald's " The Beautiful & the Damned" also available in " Penguin Classics". " Wonderful...a novel about Hollywood written from the inside". (Helen Dunmore " Sunday Times")."