Read Zelda Fitzgerald: Her Voice in Paradise Online
Authors: Sally Cline
14. Zelda and Scott pose for a
Hearst’s
International
Magazine
photograph, 1923. Zelda called it her ‘Elizabeth Arden face’ and pasted it in her scrapbook
15. Marie Hersey, Scott’s school chum and later confidante in his home town St Paul, Minnesota
16. Xandra Kalman,
c
. 1921: Zelda’s closest, most supportive friend during her young motherhood days in St Paul
17. Sara Haardt, Zelda’s frail writer friend from Montgomery who died aged 37 in 1935. Sara always received more encouragement for her writing from her husband H.L. Mencken than Zelda did from Scott
18. Critic H.L. Mencken, Scott’s literary mentor. Mencken encouraged and published Haardt’s fiction then after a long courtship married her in 1930, the year Zelda had her first breakdown
19. Annabel Fitzgerald, Scott’s sister, 1919, aged eighteen. ‘Scott advised his sister on conversation, couture and cosmetics and on how to listen to men’
20. The Fitzgerald family in the waves. Early happy years for Zelda, Scott and Scottie
21. Lubov Egorova, Zelda’s beloved ballet teacher, autographed Paris 1928
22. Painter Romaine Brooks whom Zelda met on Capri, 1925
23. Parisian influences: writers Natalie Barney and Djuna Barnes, Nice, France 1928–30. Zelda frequented Barney’s literary salon in rue Jacob, Paris
24. Emily Vanderbilt, who fascinated both Zelda and Scott and who committed suicide in May 1934
25. The beach at La Garoupe raked by Gerald Murphy, seen here under umbrellas with his wife Sara and Etienne and Edith de Beaumont,
c
. 1924. Zelda and Scott visited regularly from their villa at Juan-les-Pins
26. Ernest Hemingway, Zelda’s enemy and Scott’s hero, 1931. Hemingway’s comic inscription to Scott on this photograph lewdly suggested he was the adventurous Princetonian travel writer Halliburton