4. Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald Fitzgerald returns to a more personal novel in Tender is the Night. While This Side of Paradise is undoubtedly based on his college days and young single manhood, this novel combines elements of his nomadic life with Zelda and his Hollywood days, though more of the former. The two main characters, Dick and Nicole, seem more real than any of the characters in his other books. Daisy, for example, is sort of an idea that might have been similar to Nicole had she been more fleshed out. But Gatsby was deliberately a novel of ideals, and works in that context. What I love most about Fitzgerald, is that the ending isn't what matters, especially in Tender is the Night. There of course, is an ending, a plot turning of sorts, but it doesn't give the full message about the novel. If you knew the entire plot of a Fitzgerald novel, without reading it, you would never be able to explain the significance of it. The interplay of the relationship be
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