What Does Zelda Symbolize In The Great Gatsby

Words: 1618
Pages: 7

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, contains all of the elements needed for a wonderfully dramatic love story. Scott and Zelda are a captivating couple to the outside world, they seem to have everything; same goals, same desires, and artistic talents. The couple that seemed to be set up for greatness fizzled rather quickly. ‘Z’ makes a mark riveting the near twenty-year love story with an unseen perspective solely from the eyes of Zelda.
Zelda Sayre is a piquant southern belle that meets F. Scott Fitzgerald right as World War one ends. She was described as being a carefree young lady and often flirted with many men, however, Scott captured her heart, especially once he proved that he can turn his dropout from Princeton University into a successful career as a writer. Although Scott is a far from the stable incomed husband Zelda desires, he manages to get her to marry him with the initial success of ‘This Side of Paradise’.
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The research for the main characters took about four months, most of which was reading the letters Scott and Zelda sent to each other course of their relationship. Other research was through literary journals done that focused on the life and the decade that they made their own. Having gathered enough background material to creatively draw a new life onto, Fowler started the writing process. To keep the book fiction based and separate it from any reality she researched as much as much as she could and tried to “factualize without taking liberties”. The remaining months in the year it took to write the book were left to allow time to thoroughly edit. Fowler mentioned that “at first she wrote in third person, and then scrapped that version to write in a more favorably first person.” She felt that would “make the book more groundbreaking if it came from the perspective of Zelda specifically, and would help paint a better picture if said in her voice as if it was a diary