ipl-logo

F Scott Fitzgerald Research Paper

777 Words4 Pages

Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, or just F. Scott Fitzgerald, is one of the best American Novelist. He is an influential author who defined the 1920 or “the Jazz Age”. He shows the drama of World War I and how that is parallel to his life. His writing shows the realism and the American voice about regret, maturity, and liberated women during his generation. Even though, he is one of the best, his books didn’t get popular until his death. He is still one of the most amazing authors of all time. In his lifetime, Scott Fitzgerald knew that he wanted to become a writer but he didn’t believe in himself. He once told us that “three months before [he] born, [his] mother lost her other two sons and [he] thinks that came to first of thought, [he] don’t know how worked exactly. [He] thinks [he] started then to be a writer,” (Litz). When before he was born, he had thought of becoming a writer but he didn’t know how those thought get into his mind even before being born. He believes that he is destine to …show more content…

In one of New York Times stated that “how Scott would have loved to know that people admired and cared for his books,” (Mizener). He died believing the he was a failure in his writing career but the true is that he didn't really get famous until his death. His death impacts the way the critics thought about the true worth of his books to the society. Another example would be when a critic sees how “he reflected the Jazz Age,” (Clark). He was one author who define the 1920 as “the Jazz Age” but not many people knows that because he wasn't as famous in the 1920 as he is now. But he never got the credit for defining the 1920, his writings shows how he refined the 1920 into “the Jazz Age”. Even though, he died believing that he was a failure, the critics now feel the need to express the important of his books and how they define what “the Jazz Age” was really

Open Document