Was F. Scott Fitzgerald '17 a patriarchal villain — someone who hindered his wife Zelda's creative talents and turned her, through his drinking, into an emotional mess? Or was he a tender and ...
Zelda's mental illness, the subject of Fitzgerald's fourth novel, "Tender is the Night," had a debilitating effect on Scott's writing. He described his own "crack-up" in an essay that he wrote in ...
Read more: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s lost stories will finally be released in 2017 In fact, Zelda’s personal style has proven to be so pervasive that in 2012 – more than 60 years after her death ...
Epitomising all the glamorous hedonism of the Roaring Twenties Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald were a legendary couple but their relationship was notoriously volatile and though both passionate and ...
Born Zelda Sayre, the Alabama-raised Zelda met a fellow future novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, in 1917. They were engaged, then separated, then engaged, then married, then separated again.
To see what they mean, drive down State Street—a Scott-and-Zelda Fitzgerald dance-in-the-fountain kind of place—all whitewash and wrought iron, elegant buildings and tiled galleries ...