But what the hell do you care, you don’t read anyway.

April 12, 1857

Nothing around them had changed; and yet, for her, something more momentous had happened than if the mountains had been shoved aside.


It didn’t matter. She was not happy and never had been. Why was life so inadequate, why did the things she depended on turn immediately to dust?… Yet if somewhere there existed a strong, handsome being, with a valorous nature, at once exalted and refined, with the heart of a poet in the shape of an angel, a lyre with strings of brass, sounding elegiac epithalamiums to the heavens, then why mightn’t she, by chance, find him?.

Gustave Flaubert’s first novel, Madame Bovary was published in book form, on this date.

April 12, 1934
Already he felt her absence from these skies: on the beach he could only remember the sun-torn flesh of her shoulder; at Tarmes he crushed out her footprints as he crossed the garden; and now the orchestra launching into the Nice Carnival Song, an echo of last year’s vanished gaieties, started the little dance that went on all about her. In a hundred hours she had come to possess all the world’s dark magic; the blinding belladonna, the caffein converting physical into nervous energy, the mandragora that imposes harmony….


Charles Scribner and Sons published ‘s the fourth and final completed novel of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night, on this date. The book was completed in the fall of 1933 and serialized in four installments in Scribner’s Magazine before its publication.

Over the next several years, Fitzgerald would struggle to finish what would be his fifth and last novel (The Last Tycoon.) He died from a massive heart attack six years later in 1940, almost completely forgotten and he considered himself a failure. In 1998, the Modern Library ranked Tender Is the Night 28th on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th Century.

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