One of Americas most gifted story writers, Fitzgerald's stories of the 1920s and1930s are full of style, wit and warmth.
Check. But nobody does complicated like the one percent. This is not your everyday rags-to-riches, knight-in-shining armor whisking the poor girl off her feet kind of story. No, this is much messier. “Rich Boy takes you on a literal ride!
He's the Rich Boy
The Boy Who Robbed the Rich is the eighth book in the Fairendale series, an epic fantasy middle grade series that explores both familiar and unfamiliar fairy tales, legends, myths, and folk tales.
The Rich Boy - Francis Scott Fitzgerald - Fitzgerald's short story "The Rich Boy" (like his novel The Great Gatsby) utilizes an outside narrator to tell the story of a wealthy protagonist in a sympathetic but still somewhat distanced way.
“You're making me think of Ruff, our dog.” She paused. “He died last year. I opened the door for Grammy and he ran into the street and got hit by a car. Isn't that sad?” He nodded. In homeroom at 8:00 a.m. he wondered how on earth he'd ...
"In a hidden kingdom a mysterious Guardian protects her people with the help of a magical necklace.
Wait around for a white knight to swoop through my bathroom window with a wrench and a toilet plunger to save me from my faulty plumbing situation? Insert eye roll here.Anyway, that's the story of how I met my new landlord.
This is book one of four in the series. Contains foul language and sexual scenes; any sex featured is consensual.
This book includes Babylon Revisited, The Cut-Glass Bowl and The Lost Decade.
Together, these forty-three stories compose a vivid picture of a lost era, but their brilliance is timeless.