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Birth
F Scott Fitzgerald was born September 24th, 1896. -
Starting School
The Fitzgerald family moves back to St. Paul after Fitzgerald’s father loses his job. Fitzgerald starts to attend St. Paul Academy, and it is there that he publishes his first piece of writing, at the age of 13. -
Job
Fitzgerald moves to New York City and lands a job at an advertising agency, making $90 a month. -
First Book
His first book, This Side of Paradise, is published. The novel brings him fame and money. -
Marriage
He marries Zelda in April. They become a celebrated couple. Writer Ring Lardner describes them as the prince and princess of their generation. -
First Born
Fitzgerald has his first daughter, Francis. -
2nd and 3rd Books
Fitzgerald’s second novel, The Beautiful and Damned, is published. Tales of the Jazz Age, a collection of short stories, is also published. -
Moving
The Fitzgeralds, along with their daughter, Francis (called “Scottie”), who had been born in 1921, leave for France. After spending some time in Paris, the family moves to the Riviera. -
Masterpiece
While in France, Fitzgerald completes his masterpiece, The Great Gatsby. After the success of this book, he writes several brilliant short stories, but eight years will pass before his next novel is published. -
Downfall
After The Great Gatsby is published, Fitzgerald’s drinking becomes excessive, and Zelda suffers a mental breakdown in 1930. She spends the next year in European clinics. After she is released in 1931, they move back to the United States. She has a second breakdown in 1932 from which she never fully recovers. She publishes her first and only novel, Save Me the Waltz, which is based on the Fitzgeralds’ troubled marriage. -
Finale
Fitzgerald’s last completed novel, Tender Is the Night, is published. It is one of his most moving books but is commercially unsuccessful. -
Hospitalization
In 1936 Zelda enters Highland Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina. -
Second Love
In 1937 Fitzgerald moves to Hollywood and becomes a scriptwriter. He meets and falls in love with Sheilah Graham, a famous Hollywood gossip columnist. -
First and Final Novel
In 1939 he begins writing a novel about Hollywood entitled The Last Tycoon. The career of its hero, Monroe Stahr, is based on that of American film executive Irving Thalberg. -
Death
Fitzgerald dies of a heart attack in Hollywood on December 21, 1940. The Last Tycoon is published in the year after his death.