Violet wells's Reviews > Tender Is the Night
Tender Is the Night
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I was besotted with Scott and Zelda in my youth. Along with Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield I read everything about them I could lay my hands on. And I loved this novel because of how much obvious autobiography it contained. And to some extent the measure of enjoyment you glean from Tender will depend on how heavily you are invested emotionally in Scott and Zelda's real-life story. Because, despite all the smokescreens, the ruse that Dick and Nicole are based on Gerald and Sarah Murphy, it's very much a portrait of their life together, or the lengthy period of their life lived in France. Except in his novel Scott makes himself a psychiatrist and saves Zelda. He reverses the pattern of her illness - makes her sick to begin with and then heals her. It's a kind of wish fulfilment fantasy on his part.
Tender is the Night took Fitzgerald thirteen years to write and for a lot of this period he was drunk and it shows, especially in the early part of the novel where his structure seems off and his focus lacks sharpness. There's a sense many passages have been transposed from notebooks, shoehorned in, rather than come about organically. Often the beautiful writing doesn't mesh seamlessly into the narrative. There are lots of sensational sideshows featuring very minor characters, characters only there, in fact, to provide these sideshows - there's a duel, an attempted murder and then a successful murder. - Tender has little of the tight technical artistry of Gatsby where there was barely a superfluous word. Neither, despite its ambition, does it achieve the scope of Gatsby largely because of its structural flaws. (Not surprising as much of his material was in the midst of happening in real life: Zelda, for example, was essentially a healthy young woman when he begun this.) However, it was his personal favourite of his books and you begin to understand why in the second half which dramatically improves when Fitzgerald hones in on his two central characters, makes them more explicitly himself and Zelda and their volatile doomed marriage. Dick, a bit of a self-satisfied bore when he's in command of his life and heralded as an organiser of gaiety, becomes more interesting when he's on the back foot. The writing improves too and there are many truly beautiful passages and insights, especially on the underlying causes of human failure. And by the end Scott has evoked a generous measure of the tragic poignancy of his marriage to Zelda.
Tender is the Night took Fitzgerald thirteen years to write and for a lot of this period he was drunk and it shows, especially in the early part of the novel where his structure seems off and his focus lacks sharpness. There's a sense many passages have been transposed from notebooks, shoehorned in, rather than come about organically. Often the beautiful writing doesn't mesh seamlessly into the narrative. There are lots of sensational sideshows featuring very minor characters, characters only there, in fact, to provide these sideshows - there's a duel, an attempted murder and then a successful murder. - Tender has little of the tight technical artistry of Gatsby where there was barely a superfluous word. Neither, despite its ambition, does it achieve the scope of Gatsby largely because of its structural flaws. (Not surprising as much of his material was in the midst of happening in real life: Zelda, for example, was essentially a healthy young woman when he begun this.) However, it was his personal favourite of his books and you begin to understand why in the second half which dramatically improves when Fitzgerald hones in on his two central characters, makes them more explicitly himself and Zelda and their volatile doomed marriage. Dick, a bit of a self-satisfied bore when he's in command of his life and heralded as an organiser of gaiety, becomes more interesting when he's on the back foot. The writing improves too and there are many truly beautiful passages and insights, especially on the underlying causes of human failure. And by the end Scott has evoked a generous measure of the tragic poignancy of his marriage to Zelda.
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Quotes Violet Liked
“Later she remembered all the hours of the afternoon as happy -- one of those uneventful times that seem at the moment only a link between past and future pleasure, but turn out to have been the pleasure itself.”
― Tender Is the Night
― Tender Is the Night
“She smiled at him, making sure that the smile gathered up everything inside her and directed it toward him, making him a profound promise of herself for so little, for the beat of a response, the assurance of a complimentary vibration in him.”
― Tender Is the Night
― Tender Is the Night
“I don't ask you to love me always like this, but I ask you to remember. Somewhere inside me there'll always be the person I am tonight”
― Tender Is the Night
― Tender Is the Night
“In the dead white hours in Zurich staring into a stranger's pantry across the upshine of a street-lamp, he used to think that he wanted to be good, he wanted to be kind, he wanted to be brave and wise, but it was all pretty difficult. He wanted to be loved, too, if he could fit it in.”
― Tender Is the Night
― Tender Is the Night
“Well, you never knew exactly how much space you occupied in people's lives. Yet from this fog his affection emerged--the best contacts are when one knows the obstacles and still wants to preserve a relation.”
― Tender Is the Night
― Tender Is the Night
Reading Progress
Finished Reading
February 18, 2014
– Shelved
March 29, 2021
–
Started Reading
April 15, 2021
–
Finished Reading
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Lynne
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rated it 5 stars
Apr 15, 2021 08:02AM
Violet, I loved this book when I read it many years ago and you have written an excellent review. I have several biographies on Scott-Fitzgerald and also Zelda. However, what sad endings for both of them tragic in fact.
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A beauteous and nuanced tribute to your lasting soft spot for Scott (and Zelda), Violet. I knew little of them when I embarked on this novel, possibly this made it hard for me to enjoy this, precisely because of the flaws you point out so well - I was quite astonished by the sheer perfection of 'Gatsby' when I finally got to it.
Such a beautiful review.
Can I ask how should one go about reading F Scott after reading Gatsby only?
Can I ask how should one go about reading F Scott after reading Gatsby only?
Lynne wrote: "Violet, I loved this book when I read it many years ago and you have written an excellent review. I have several biographies on Scott-Fitzgerald and also Zelda. However, what sad endings for both o..."
Thanks Lynn. Lovely to hear from you. Hope you're well.
Thanks Lynn. Lovely to hear from you. Hope you're well.
Ilse wrote: "A beauteous and nuanced tribute to your lasting soft spot for Scott (and Zelda), Violet. I knew little of them when I embarked on this novel, possibly this made it hard for me to enjoy this, precis..."
Thanks Ilse. I think the problem essentially is that it was about three different books and it wasn't until Zelda became sick and was diagnosed as schizophrenic that he story became clearer to him. But in the early parts it still contains traces of its former incarnations.
Thanks Ilse. I think the problem essentially is that it was about three different books and it wasn't until Zelda became sick and was diagnosed as schizophrenic that he story became clearer to him. But in the early parts it still contains traces of its former incarnations.
Rt wrote: "Such a beautiful review.
Can I ask how should one go about reading F Scott after reading Gatsby only?"
Thanks RT. I'd read this. It's definitely his second best novel.
Can I ask how should one go about reading F Scott after reading Gatsby only?"
Thanks RT. I'd read this. It's definitely his second best novel.
I also went through a big Fitzgerald phase in my later teen years and was fascinated by him and Zelda. I've been willing myself to re-read his work for the past few years. It will happen eventually I hope!
Did you ever read The Love of the Last Tycoon? I'm tempted, but that really depends on just how unfinished it is.
Lucie wrote: "I also went through a big Fitzgerald phase in my later teen years and was fascinated by him and Zelda. I've been willing myself to re-read his work for the past few years. It will happen eventually..."
Got to say I loved this a lot more when I was in my teens, Lucie.
Got to say I loved this a lot more when I was in my teens, Lucie.
Steven wrote: "Did you ever read The Love of the Last Tycoon? I'm tempted, but that really depends on just how unfinished it is."
I have read it. It's only about a third done. It makes you imagine what it might have been like finished - very good, I'd say. A real shame he didn't finish it.
I have read it. It's only about a third done. It makes you imagine what it might have been like finished - very good, I'd say. A real shame he didn't finish it.
I read most of his novels in college and have reread Gatsby my favorite novel several times, but not any of the others. I should. Fabulous review, Violet.
This is such a lovely review, Violet. I have had this book forever and a day, and it’s about time that I read it.
Angela M wrote: "I read most of his novels in college and have reread Gatsby my favorite novel several times, but not any of the others. I should. Fabulous review, Violet."
Thanks Angela. I know how much you love Gatsby. This is his second best book.
Thanks Angela. I know how much you love Gatsby. This is his second best book.
Michael wrote: "have never been able to enjoy his short stories- am i missing something?"
An awful lot of his stories were written for quick money. There are about half a dozen gems but unfortunately they've never been collected in one volume.
An awful lot of his stories were written for quick money. There are about half a dozen gems but unfortunately they've never been collected in one volume.
TBV (on semi-hiatus) wrote: "This is such a lovely review, Violet. I have had this book forever and a day, and it’s about time that I read it."
Thanks TBV.
Thanks TBV.
Elyse wrote: "Thanks Violet! Beautiful review! I really must read this! xo"
Thanks Elyse! Lots to love despite the flaws. Xx
Thanks Elyse! Lots to love despite the flaws. Xx
Such a brilliant review, Violet. In spite of the flawed structure, it is a beautiful book with some wonderful moments. Now I will have to read Zelda's portrayal of their time together.
Beautiful Violet! It’s been sandwiched in between my disorderly piles of books for ages. I pulled it out and started it last night as my bedtime reading. It’s funny I thought to myself Scott was definitely imbibed with its superfluous sentences. But that made it dreamy for me and now I am eagerly looking forward to bedtime.