Tender is the Night | Style

Title
The title comes from a line in John Keats’s “Ode to a Nightingale”: The poem, with its forlorn images of drinking, fits the character and tone of the book. As a young writer Fitzgerald was profoundly influenced by Keats. While in Italy, in chapter XXII of Book Two, on his way back to his hotel where a note from Rosemary is awaiting him, Dick feels his “spirits soared before the flower stalls and the house where Keats had died.”

Three-Part Narrative Structure Tender Is the Night is divided into three sections, or Books. Although the novel is...


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