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 Born 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota to a family with high social aspirations but little wealth.  Distant relative was Francis Scott Key, the writer of.

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Presentation on theme: " Born 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota to a family with high social aspirations but little wealth.  Distant relative was Francis Scott Key, the writer of."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Born 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota to a family with high social aspirations but little wealth.  Distant relative was Francis Scott Key, the writer of “The Star Spangled Banner.”  Attended Princeton University in 1913, but failed to graduate.  He joined the army in 1917 and, while in training camp, wrote the draft of “This Side of Paradise.” The book was published in 1920 and sold 40,000 copies in six months.

3  Zelda Sayre, a southern belle from Montgomery, Alabama. They married in 1920.  Together, they lived a fast life. Traveling to New York and Europe, mingling with rich and famous artist and aristocrats and spending money recklessly.

4  Productive writer  Dozens of short stories  Playboy image  The Vegetable He was an alcoholic, but he wrote sober. There were frequent domestic rows, usually triggered by drinking bouts.

5  The Fitzgerald’s moved to France in 1924. He started writing The Great Gatsby.  The Great Gatsby marked a striking advance in Fitzgerald’s technique, utilizing a complex structure and a controlled narrative point of view.  Fitzgerald’s achievement received critical praise, but sales of Gatsby were disappointing, though the stage and movie rights brought additional income.

6  Fitzgerald’s peak story fee of $4,000 from The Saturday Evening Post may have had in 1929 the purchasing power of $40,000 in present-day dollars. .Fitzgerald was not among the highest-paid writers of his time; his novels earned comparatively little, and most of his income came from 160 magazine stories.  During the 1920s his income from all sources averaged under $25,000 a year of good money at a time when a schoolteacher’s average annual salary was $1,299, but not a fortune.

7 Scott and Zelda’s relationship continued to be strained in the 1920’s due to his drinking and her mental instability. Even though he earned a lot of money, they continued to go into debt.

8  Fitzgerald went to Hollywood alone in the summer of 1937 with a six-month Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer screenwriting contract at $1,000 a week. He received his only screen credit for adapting Three Comrades (1938), and his contract was renewed for a year at $1,250 a week.  The $91,000 he earned from MGM was a great deal of money during the late Depression. After MGM dropped his option at the end of 1938, Fitzgerald worked as a freelance script writer and wrote short-short stories for Esquire.

9  He began his Hollywood novel, The Love of the Last Tycoon, in 1939 and had written more than half of a working draft when he died of a heart attack in Graham’s apartment on December 21, 1940.  Zelda Fitzgerald perished at a fire in Highland Hospital in 1948.

10  In the last year of his life, Fitzgerald, who had once been the highest paid author in the country, earned just $13.13 from his writing.  F. Scott Fitzgerald died believing himself a failure. By 1960 he had achieved a secure place among America’s enduring writers. The Great Gatsby, a work that seriously examines the theme of aspiration in an American setting, defines the classic American novel.

11 "You don't write because you want to say something, you write because you have something to say." — F. Scott FitzgeraldF. Scott Fitzgerald

12  www.sc.edu/fitgerald/biography.html www.sc.edu/fitgerald/biography.html  Fitzgerald, F. Scott. “Winter Dreams.” Prentice Hall Literature The American Experience.


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