In 1918, Ginevra King married a man of her own social class and sent Fitzgerald a wedding announcement, which he saved. This first romance is reflected in most of his stories such as his first novel, The Romantic Egoist, which was named This Side of Paradise afterward. Ginevra King served as inspiration for the characters …show more content…
Probably because she was alone while he was working – may be continuing her irresponsible pattern from her youth –Zelda started an affair with Edouard Jozan, a young French aviator, whom they had both met at the seaside. It was possibly no more than an unconsummated love, but Fitzgerald was angry when he was informed about it. Intensely distressed, Fitzgerald forced a quarrel with Jozan, who left. The whole episode endured six weeks. Such as Fitzgerald's control and severely imagined and felt was the material for his stories that these distressing events did not ruin his growth on the manuscript, called at diverse times Among The Ash Heaps and Millionaires, Trimalchio in West Egg, The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night, where the theme of betrayal is steady. Zelda included elements of that event into Save Me the Waltz too. In his Notebooks, Fitzgerald wrote: “That September of 1924, I knew something had happened that could never be repaired.” (Bruccoli, 1978,