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F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby And Tender Is The Night

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F. Scott Fitzgerald, Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald in full, (born September 24, 1896, St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.—died December 21, 1940, Hollywood, California), was an American short-story writer and novelist famous for his depictions of the Jazz Age (the 1920s), with his most famous novel being The Great Gatsby (1925). His wife, Zelda, was his muse and her likeness is prominently featured in his works including This Side of Paradise, The Beautiful and the Damned, The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night (Mizener). To escape the life that they together feared might bring them to an end, the Fitzgeralds (together with their daughter, Frances, called “Scottie,” born in 1921) moved in the 1920s to France, where they became a part of a group of American expatriates; Fitzgerald described this society in his last completed novel, Tender Is the Night. Shortly after their arrival in France, Fitzgerald completed his most famous novel, The Great Gatsby (1925). All of Fitzgerald's 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. Consequentially The Great Gatsby is the most controversial American novel of its time; at its conclusion, Fitzgerald connects the dream of Jay Gatsby, with the dream of the discoverers of America (Mizener). …show more content…

The primary narrator is Nick Carraway, ends up being the novel’s most interesting

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