17- ] American Literature
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – 1940
Francis
Scott Fitzgerald was an American novelist, widely regarded as one of the
greatest, if not the greatest, American writers of the 20th century. He is best
known for his novel, The Great Gatsby, which vies for the title ‘Great American
Novel’ with Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn and Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick.
Fitzgerald’s place on this list is justified by the fact that his great novel
is actually about America.
F.
Scott Fitzgerald, in full Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, (born September 24,
1896, St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.—died December 21, 1940, Hollywood, California),
American short-story writer and novelist famous for his depictions of the Jazz
Age (the 1920s), his most brilliant novel being The Great Gatsby (1925). His
private life, with his wife, Zelda, in both America and France, became almost
as celebrated as his novels.
Fitzgerald
was the only son of an unsuccessful, aristocratic father and an energetic,
provincial mother. Half the time he thought of himself as the heir of his
father’s tradition . As a result he had
typically ambivalent American feelings about American life, which seemed to him
at once vulgar and dazzlingly promising.
He
also had an intensely romantic imagination, what he once called “a heightened
sensitivity to the promises of life,” and he charged into experience determined
to realize those promises. At both St. Paul Academy (1908–10) and Newman School
(1911–13), he tried too hard and made himself unpopular, but at Princeton
University he came close to realizing his dream of a brilliant success. He
became a prominent figure in the literary life of the university and made
lifelong friendships with Edmund Wilson and John Peale Bishop. He became a
leading figure in the socially important Triangle Club, a dramatic society, and
was elected to one of the leading clubs of the university. He fell in love with
Ginevra King, one of the beauties of her generation. Then he lost Ginevra and
flunked out of Princeton.
He
returned to Princeton the next fall, but he had now lost all the positions he
coveted, and in November 1917 he left to join the army. In July 1918, while he
was stationed near Montgomery, Alabama, he met Zelda Sayre, the daughter of an
Alabama Supreme Court judge. They fell deeply in love, and, as soon as he
could, Fitzgerald headed for New York determined to achieve instant success and
to marry Zelda. What he achieved was an advertising job at $90 a month. Zelda
broke their engagement, and, after an epic drunk, Fitzgerald retired to St.
Paul, Minnesota, to rewrite for the second time a novel he had begun at
Princeton. In the spring of 1920 it was published, he married Zelda, and riding
in a taxi one afternoon between very tall buildings under a mauve and rosy sky;
I began to bawl because I had everything I wanted and knew I would never be so
happy again.
This
Side of Paradise was a revelation of the new morality of the young; it made
Fitzgerald famous. This fame opened to him magazines of literary prestige, such
as Scribner’s, and high-paying popular ones, such as The Saturday Evening Post.
This sudden prosperity made it possible for him and Zelda to play the roles
they were so beautifully equipped for, and Ring Lardner called them the prince
and princess of their generation. Though they loved these roles, they were
frightened by them, too, as the ending of Fitzgerald’s second novel, The
Beautiful and Damned (1922), shows. The Beautiful and Damned describes a
handsome young man and his beautiful wife, who gradually degenerate into a
shopworn middle age while they wait for the young man to inherit a large
fortune. Ironically, they finally get it, when there is nothing of them left
worth preserving.
To
escape the life that they feared might bring them to this end, the Fitzgeralds
(together with their daughter, Frances, called “Scottie,” born in 1921) moved
in 1924 to the Riviera, where they found themselves a part of a group of
American expatriates whose style was largely set by Gerald and Sara Murphy;
Fitzgerald described this society in his last completed novel, Tender Is the
Night, and modeled its hero on Gerald Murphy. Shortly after their arrival in
France, Fitzgerald completed his most brilliant novel, The Great Gatsby (1925).
All of his divided nature is in this novel, the naive Midwesterner afire with
the possibilities of the “American Dream” in its hero, Jay Gatsby, and the
compassionate Yale gentleman in its narrator, Nick Carraway. The Great Gatsby
is the most profoundly American novel of its time; at its conclusion,
Fitzgerald connects Gatsby’s dream, his “Platonic conception of himself,” with
the dream of the discoverers of America. Some of Fitzgerald’s finest short
stories appeared in All the Sad Young Men (1926), particularly “The Rich Boy”
and “Absolution,” but it was not until eight years later that another novel
appeared.
What
Pop Culture Got Wrong About F. Scott Fitzgerald
The
next decade of the Fitzgeralds’ lives was disorderly and unhappy. Fitzgerald
began to drink too much, and Zelda suddenly, ominously, began to practice
ballet dancing night and day. In 1930 she had a mental breakdown and in 1932
another, from which she never fully recovered. Through the 1930s they fought to
save their life together, and, when the battle was lost, Fitzgerald said, “I
left my capacity for hoping on the little roads that led to Zelda’s
sanitarium.” He did not finish his next novel, Tender Is the Night, until 1934.
It is the story of a psychiatrist who marries one of his patients, who, as she
slowly recovers, exhausts his vitality until he is, in Fitzgerald’s words, un
homme épuisé (“a man used up”). This is Fitzgerald’s most moving book, though
it was commercially unsuccessful.
With
its failure and his despair over Zelda, Fitzgerald was close to becoming an
incurable alcoholic. By 1937, however, he had come back far enough to become a
scriptwriter in Hollywood, and there he met and fell in love with Sheilah
Graham, a famous Hollywood gossip columnist. For the rest of his life—except
for occasional drunken spells when he became bitter and violent—Fitzgerald
lived quietly with her. (Occasionally he went east to visit Zelda or his
daughter Scottie, who entered Vassar College in 1938.) In October 1939 he began
a novel about Hollywood, The Last Tycoon. The career of its hero, Monroe Stahr,
is based on that of the producer Irving Thalberg. This is Fitzgerald’s final
attempt to create his dream of the promises of American life and of the kind of
man who could realize them. In the intensity with which it is imagined and in
the brilliance of its expression, it is the equal of anything Fitzgerald ever
wrote, and it is typical of his luck that he died of a heart attack with his
novel only half-finished. He was 44 years old.
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