Title | : | F. Scott Fitzgerald: Under the Influence |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1557788480 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781557788481 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 416 |
Publication | : | First published March 1, 2006 |
Fitzgerald's life and novels continue to personify the great contradictions in American culture and in American capitalism. Fitzgerald's novels—especially The Beautiful and Damned, The Great Gatsby and Tender is the Night— can tell us about our past but just as much about the present and our future. Notably, Scott had originally set Gatsby in the Gilded Age, an age of excesses similar to those of the 1920s. Today the Casino Economy—beginning in the early 1980s and becoming global—has remarkable parallels to these earlier epochs.
Then, the inevitable; the crashes came. A banking panic in 1907 ended the Gilded Age though not the gild, the Crash of 1929 ended the Jazz Age though not "all that jazz," and the collapse of the technology-driven Nasdaq in 2001 brought an end to the most notorious players in the Casino Economy though not its legacy. Zelda, on the precipice at an earlier age than most supposed then or since, crashed shortly after the stock market. Although the public was unaware of Zelda's plunge, only the Great Depression upstaged Scott's "crack-up." As he dispassionately acknowledged, his literary reputation had gone the way of the economy, as had his earnings from the Saturday Evening Post that sustained his little family.
Though Scott's novels have long been on required reading lists around the world, Fitzgerald and Zelda's cultural presence ebbs and flows. There nonetheless was, of course, a "first" Fitzgerald Revival. It came during the early 1950s—being first literary, but inevitably leading to a renewal of his cultural significance. The Fitzgerald Revival now underway is, if anything, even more confounding because it follows some serious academic studies, yet derives its inert velocity from the vibrant personalities of Zelda and Scott, while its deeper significance once again is properly attributed to Scott.
F. Scott Fitzgerald: Under the Influence Reviews
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This biography explores Fitzgerald's life throught the lens of the writers and thinkers who influenced him. There were several influences of Fitzgerald's thinking that I had not heard of before reading the book. Canterbery gives us a chronological narrative of Fitzgerald's life and paces the book into the periods that Fitzgerald spent with his "Golden Girls" the three most important women in his life Genevra, Zelda, and Sheilah. Canterbery gives due time to the juicy stories of Fitzgerald's life but this biography goes much more deeply into the forces that shaped Fitzgerald's writing. At times the coverage of the people that Fitzgerald was studying strays too far from the subject but overall I enjoyed this distinct portrait of Fitzgerald.
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Gawkily written, and weirdly determined to make Fitzgerald into an intellectual. The most recent full biography, I think.
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