Similarities Between Zelda Sayre And The Great Gatsby

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“This is the final irony - that the dark image of Fitzgerald in the 1930s came from Fitzgerald himself” (“Fitzgerald: The Authority of Failure” 288). When Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby, he did not have to look very far for a source for his masterpiece; the events in the book are similar to the events in Fitzgerald’s life. The author shared an upbringing with the narrator of the novel, Nick Carraway. Fitzgerald's failure and death were also similar to that of the main character, Jay Gatsby. The affairs and relationships in the story were based on Fitzgerald's relationship with Zelda Sayre. In The Great Gatsby, aspects of F. Scott Fitzgerald's own life were reflected in the lives and actions of the characters.
The first way that Fitzgerald's …show more content…

Nick was not overly sentimental, “representing the dry-eyed, skeptical side of Fitzgerald’s temperament” (“THE BOOK AND AUTHOR” 5). He was disgusted by Gatsby’s romanticism, and Fitzgerald was equally cynical. However, both Nick and Fitzgerald were apprehensive about getting older. “I was thirty. Before me stretched the portentous, menacing road of a new decade” (Fitzgerald 135). Nick was concerned about aging, no longer feeling young and carefree. His concern about aging was a reflection of Fitzgerald’s feelings. “Fitzgerald is about to turn forty, no easy transition for someone whose life was so identified with the passion and promise of youth” (“Fitzgerald: The Authority of Failure” 291). Fitzgerald was also worried about getting older, and found it hard to maintain his youthful liveliness as he …show more content…

First, both Fitzgerald and Gatsby were not truly happy with their wealth and the fulfillment of their dreams. “Fitzgerald’s Great Neck years were not the happiest time of his life, though he seemed, like Gatsby to be sitting on top of the world” (“Fitzgerald: The Authority of Failure” 288). Fitzgerald had a lot of money, yet he eventually discovered that his happiness was hollow. Like Fitzgerald at the peak of his wealth and fame, Gatsby was not happy once he achieved his goal of winning back Daisy. “As I went over to say good-by I saw that the expression of bewilderment had come back into Gatsby’s face, as though a faint doubt had occurred to him as to the quality of his present happiness” (Fitzgerald 95). Gatsby tried to believe he was truly happy, just as Fitzgerald continued to desire wealth and fame. Unfortunately, Fitzgerald's excessive wealth led to his later sadness. “F. Scott Fitzgerald’s life is a tragic example of both sides of the American Dream - the joys of young love, wealth and success, and the tragedies associated with excess and failure” (Willett). Although Fitzgerald was happy in his youth, as he acquired and lost fame, he became a failure and ended up a tragic figure. Gatsby also overindulged in his wealth and desire for Daisy, and ended up a failure. “The sad lesson of

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