destroyed what was left of her Hollywood career. She was more or less offi- cially blacklisted through the end of the fifties. — Stuart Y. Silverstein, "Introduction", Not Much Fun:The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker ( New York: Scribner, 1996), 47-49, 52-53, 55 BIBLIOGRAPHY High Society (with George S. Chappell and Frank Crowninshield). 1920. Men I'm Not Married To. 1922. Enough Rope. 1926. Sunset Gun. 1928. Close Harmony;or, The Lady Next Door (with Elmer Rice). 1929. Laments for the Living. 1930. Death and Taxes. 1931. Collected Poetry. 1931. After Such Pleasures. 1933. Collected Poems:Not So Deep as a Well. 1936. Here Lies:The Collected Stories. 1939. Collected Stories. 1942. The Portable Dorothy Parker. 1944. The Portable F. Scott Fitzgerald (ed.). 1945. The Ladies of the Corridor (with Arnaud d'Usseau). 1953. Candide (adaptation; with Lillian Hellman and Richard Wilbur). 1957. Short Story:A Thematic Anthology (ed., with Frederick B. Shroyer). 1965. Constant Reader. 1970. A Month of Saturdays. 1971. The Collected Dorothy Parker. 1973. -119- |