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Great American Writer F. Scott Fitzgerald


But Fitzgerald was still an Irish-Catholic and the son of a failed boozing businessman, the establishment would never accept him. He became interested in girls early and apparently received 11 valentines at the age of 15. He seemed to excel at everything him did even in his early teens, whether in sports or writing, a possessed a drive to prove himself, which fueled him throughout his life. He wrote songs and plays and wrote frequently with dozens of different women at once. In love, as with most things, he saw girls as a conquest, as another challenge. .
             The first woman truly interested him was Ginerva King whom he met in college. She was from a rich and well to do family and they exchanged a passionate correspondence but according to legend her father ended the romance because he was poor. Eventually he met Zelda Sayre who would become the love of his life. She was from the same sort of well to do family Ginerva was and by all rights should have been the typical Southern Belle. But Zelda possessed a fire in her "without a thought for anyone else I did not have a single feeling of inferiority, or shyness, or doubt and no moral principals.(Wilson, 1996, pg 20)" She was beautiful, intelligent and challenged Fitzgerald in every way. Fitzgerald was 21 and serving in the army nearby her house, and he met her at a dance her hometown put on to welcome the troops (Bruccoli, 1994). .
             After being discharged from the army Fitzgerald went to work with fervor and intensity unusual even for him. He moved to New York desperate to earn the money that would earn him the hand of his love. This Side of Paradise made Fitzegerald the money he needed to be worthy of Zelda.


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