A novel of zelda fitzgerald review
Z: A Novel of
Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald. Written by Therese Anne Fowler Review by Sarah Johnson. An intimate portrait of a flamboyantly public marriage, Z imagines Zelda Fitzgerald’s voice in this exhilarating account of a life lived in decadent, full color. During the Jazz Age, Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald personified the era’s reckless abandon.A dazzling novel that Therese Anne Fowler’s brilliant new book Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald attempts to give a clearer picture of the distaff side of a fascinating duo. Working from letters, writings, and verifiable stories of the Fitzgeralds, and supplementing this information with sharp discernment and vivid imagination, Ms. Fowler goes a step beyond biography.
This Zelda is brisk Fowler set out to uncover a more intimate portrait of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s wife and lifelong love, Zelda. While Fitzgerald has been heralded one of America’s greatest writers, and most of us read a novel or two in school, his worthiness was more than put to the test in Z.
I enjoyed this book very Before F. Scott Fitzgerald was a literary darling, he was a young WWI army lieutenant who fell hard for a spirited Southern belle named Zelda Sayre. The life he and Zelda would lead together in New York, Long Island, Paris, Hollywood, and on the French Riviera made them legends even in their own time. Set amidst the glamour of the Jazz Age and The Lost Generation’s vivid world abroad, Z.