Flappers and Philosophers is F. Scott Fitzgerald's debut short story collection and an early expression of the Jazz Age sensibility he would come to define. Gathering eight stories written at the dawn of Fitzgerald's career, the collection captures the restless energy of postwar youth, the shifting codes of courtship and class, and the fragile optimism of a generation testing new freedoms. Among the most celebrated pieces are "Bernice Bobs Her Hair," a sharp satire of social ambition and feminine reinvention, and "The Ice Palace," a study of regional difference and emotional misunderstanding. Even in these early stories, Fitzgerald displays the themes that would shape his later masterpieces: romantic aspiration, wealth and illusion, youth and disillusionment, and the tension between desire and social reality. The prose is bright, ironic, and observant-alternately playful and melancholy-announcing the arrival of a major American voice. This Wilder Publications edition presents the complete 1920 text and aligns with our clustered editions of Fitzgerald's early works, including Early F. Scott Fitzgerald: Winter Dreams and the Princeton Stories , offering readers a coherent view of the author's formative period. F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) was an American novelist and short story writer whose work came to epitomize the Jazz Age. Educated at Princeton, Fitzgerald achieved early success with This Side of Paradise and went on to produce some of the most enduring works in American literature, including The Great Gatsby. His fiction explores themes of ambition, class, romance, and the illusions of wealth, securing his place as one of the defining writers of the twentieth century.