Though the beginning of this book provides some strict historical information on Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, the majority of it is, of necessity, a biography of her better known husband. It is a sad fact that Zelda is, essentially, an extension of him; their lives were so closely intertwined and mutually dependent that it would be impossible to look at only half of the dynamic couple.
It is difficult to get a sense of who she was in her childhood and adolescence; wild, reckless, the pampered baby of the Sayre family, she took liberties and performed outlandish feats, simply to gain the attention of those around her. Of course, once she became Mrs. Fitzgerald, she and Scott, as a couple, developed a reputation for careless hedonism, becoming the defining symbols of the “Jazz Age”. But their relationship, while mutually supportive and doting, was also a fierce power struggle, a jockeying for position on the literary scene. Was she a genius, with as much, if not more, promise than him? Difficult to say; certainly she was talented, possessed an extraordinary gift for description, and her correspondence reads like poetry. Add to that the idea that she created the characters and situations for his work, as he took possession of her diaries and drew heavily on them to craft his stories. At one point, he went so far as to tell her that her experiences belonged to him, since he provided for her care. Curious, then, that he took little responsibility for his own actions, blaming her for his alcoholism and ill health.
For her part, Zelda was frustrated by her professional shortcomings. It is, perhaps, a burden to believe in one’s potential for greatness, and see no path to realize it. She was driven from one frantic excess to another, seeking release for her talents and emotions, never quite achieving a satisfactory expression. As she began her solitary descent into the dark caverns of madness, Scott tried to be supportive while managing his own demons; but ultimately, she was alone, her schizophrenia creating a tragic disconnect from the world for which she desperately reached.