F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940) is the author of The Great Gatsby, hailed as the Great American Novel. His debut, This Side of Paradise, was a cultural sensation that shined a spotlight on the Jazz Age. The novel changed his life: magazines accepted previously rejected work, and Zelda Sayre agreed to marry him. His next work, The Beautiful and the Damned, solidified his place in the cultural elite. After Zelda’s hospitalization for schizophrenia, Fitzgerald completed Tender Is the Night. Finally sober, Fitzgerald died of a heart attack at age forty-four. His friend the critic and writer Edmund Wilson completed Fitzgerald’s unfinished novel The Last Tycoon.

Winter Dreams

A Story

by F. Scott Fitzgerald
I

Some of the caddies were poor as sin and lived in one-room houses with a neurasthenic cow in the front yard, but Dexter Green’s father owned the second best grocery-store in Black Bear—the best one was “The Hub,” patronized by the wealthy people from Sherry Island—and Dexter caddied only for pocket-money.

In the fall when the days became crisp and gray, and the long Minnesota winter shut down like the white lid of a box, Dexter’s skis moved over the snow that hid the fairways of the golf course. At these times the country gave him a feeling of profound melancholy—it offended him that the links should lie in enforced fallowness, haunted by ragged sparrows for the long season. It was dreary, too, that on the tees where the gay colors fluttered in summer there were now only the desolate sand-boxes knee-deep in crusted ice. When he crossed the hills the wind blew cold as misery, and if the sun was out he tramped with his eyes squinted up against the hard dimensionless glare.

In April the winter ceased abruptly. The snow ran down into Black Bear Lake scarcely tarrying for the early golfers to brave the season with red and black balls. Without elation, without an interval of moist glory, the cold was gone.

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