Language: English [ others ]
Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Tender Is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Loading...

Tender Is the Night

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
3,64825398 (3.84)51

Members

all members

Member tags

numbers | all tags

LibraryThing recommendations

Common KnowledgeShare what you know.

view history Creative Commons License ?
You must log in to edit Common Knowledge data.
For more help see the Common Knowledge help page.
Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
Important places
People/Characters
Awards and honors
Epigraph
Dedication
First words
The hotel and its bright, tan prayer rug of a beach were one.
Quotations
Last words
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
Blurbers

LibraryThing members' description

Creative Commons License ?
Book description

Book descriptions

Amazon.com (ISBN 068480154X, Paperback)

In the wake of World War I, a community of expatriate American writers established itself in the salons and cafes of 1920s Paris. They congregated at Gertrude Stein's select soirees, drank too much, married none too wisely, and wrote volumes--about the war, about the Jazz Age, and often about each other. F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, were part of this gang of literary Young Turks, and it was while living in France that Fitzgerald began writing Tender Is the Night. Begun in 1925, the novel was not actually published until 1934. By then, Fitzgerald was back in the States and his marriage was on the rocks, destroyed by Zelda's mental illness and alcoholism. Despite the modernist mandate to keep authors and their creations strictly segregated, it's difficult not to look for parallels between Fitzgerald's private life and the lives of his characters, psychiatrist Dick Diver and his former patient turned wife, Nicole. Certainly the hospital in Switzerland where Zelda was committed in 1929 provided the inspiration for the clinic where Diver meets, treats, and then marries the wealthy Nicole Warren. And Fitzgerald drew both the European locale and many of the characters from places and people he knew from abroad.

In the novel, Dick is eventually ruined--professionally, emotionally, and spiritually--by his union with Nicole. Fitzgerald's fate was not quite so novelistically neat: after Zelda was diagnosed as a schizophrenic and committed, Fitzgerald went to work as a Hollywood screenwriter in 1937 to pay her hospital bills. He died three years later--not melodramatically, like poor Jay Gatsby in his swimming pool, but prosaically, while eating a chocolate bar and reading a newspaper. Of all his novels, Tender Is the Night is arguably the one closest to his heart. As he himself wrote, "Gatsby was a tour de force, but this is a confession of faith."

(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 25 Aug 2008 02:16:29 -0400)

(see all 2 descriptions)

editBuy, borrow, swap or view

Abebooks
Alibris
Amazon.com
Barnes & Noble
BookFinder.com
BookSense
Worldcat

Swap this book (29/9)

Google Books: Loading...

Popular covers

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 32,095,366 books!