Before he wrote some of the twentieth century's greatest fiction, before he married Zelda, F.Scott Fitzgerald loved Ginevra, a fickle young Chicago socialite he met during the winter break from Princeton.But Ginevra threw over the soon-to-be-famous novelist, and the rest is literary history.Ginevra would be the model for many of Fitzgerald's coolly fascinating but unattainable heroines, including the elusive object of Jay Gatsby's unrequited love, Daisy Buchanan.
In this captivating and moving novel, Caroline Preston imagines what life might have been like for Fitzgerald's first love, following Ginevra from her gilded youth as the daughter of a tycoon through disillusioned marriage and motherhood.An engrossing fictional portrait, Gatsby's Girl deftly explores the relationship between a famous author and his muse.