Taking Tea in the Kasbah



Tender Is The Night is the second book on my list of 50 classic books I’ve chosen to read as part of The Classics Club Challenge (which you can read more about here). I chose it because I really enjoyed The Great Gatsby and wanted to read more by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald and my Shakespearean insults mug. Literary snobbery at its finest.

A literary vignette: Fitzgerald and my Shakespearean insults mug.

Here’s the Amazon synopsis: Set on the French Riviera in the late 1920s, Tender Is the Night is the tragic romance of the young actress Rosemary Hoyt and the stylish American couple Dick and Nicole Diver. A brilliant young psychiatrist at the time of his marriage, Dick is both husband and doctor to Nicole, whose wealth goads him into a lifestyle not his own, and whose growing strength highlights Dick’s harrowing demise. 

Dick is eventually ruined–professionally, emotionally, and spiritually–by his union with Nicole. Of all his novels, Tender Is the Night is arguably the one closest to his heart. As he himself wrote, “Gatsby was a tour de force, but this is a confession of faith.”

Tender Is The Night is touted as a semi-autobiographical book for Fitzgerald whose wife, Zelda, was struggling with her own mental health issues at the time this was written. It is even said that the clinic in Switzerland where Dick Diver was practicing was inspired by the Swiss institution where Zelda had been hospitalized.

I’m probably committing literary blasphemy typing this since Tender Is The Night is hailed as one of the Fitzgerald’s greatest novels and I’ll be struck down by a bada$$ librarian/English major wielding a taser in the shape of a book, but… I just didn’t care for this one. Perhaps I’m taking the content too literally and not seeing the thematic forest for the trees. I’ll concede there were some beautifully written passages and Fitzgerald’s lyrical writing is superb. It’s through Dick Diver’s inevitable downfall Fitzgerald wove what was undoubtedly his own deep sadness at watching the woman he loved being tormented by her own mind and being powerless to stop it. This, in my opinion, is Fitzgerald’s greatest achievement with this novel.

The descriptions of the parties and socializing that took place on the French Riviera in the 1920’s were so well crafted I could almost feel the breeze blowing across the sea and sun-warmed sand beneath my feet. Fitzgerald masterfully evokes such vivd imagery that you can’t help but be drawn in and feel like you’re a guest at the gatherings, eavesdropping on the conversations and casually spying on the other guests.

On the flip side, however, I had a really hard time looking past a few things that just didn’t sit well with me. Like the way Dick Diver seriously crossed some ethical and professional boundaries by being the doctor for his wife’s mental health treatment. Or the way Nicole’s initial diagnosis came about and later, when it’s revealed why she had her initial breakdown, how that reason is simply overlooked. And then there’s Rosemary, the up and coming Hollywood starlet who is practically shoved into the arms of the very married Dr. Diver by her own mother.

I’m probably missing the point of this story and am showing my literary ignorance with this review. I really did want to like this book. I truly did. But… I simply didn’t.

Sorry, Fitz. I’ll give your other books a try and won’t hold this one against you. Promise.

Up next on The Classics Club Challenge List: The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón.

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Now it’s your turn: have you read Tender Is The Night? If so, what did you think of it? If not, have you read any other of Fitzgerald’s books? Do you have a favorite? Are you reading any classic books right now? Sit, sip, and share. Don’t be shy. I always love hearing from you.

 

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6 thoughts on “Tender Is The Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Classics Club Review

  1. I went through a read-the-classics phase nearly two decades ago. Like you, some were stellar reads, worthy of timeless recognition. Others? Had they been the author’s first work, it’s not likely I would have followed that author back-in-the-day.

    I can’t name specific books. It’s 5:51 freaking a.m. and my brain just got its first hit of caffeine.( It’s waving “hi!” No. Wait! It’s “go away.”)

    Great review, and thanks for reminding me of the storyline behind Tender is the Night. I hope I’m not alone when I say I have read so many books, they sometimes become a mish-mush in my memory bank.

    It I’m alone in that dilemma, pass the coffee and a couch in Dr. Diver’s office.

    • Yeah, not all of the classics measure up to what I would consider a great book. Fitzgerald’s writing? Stellar. This particular story? Not so much. I was a psych major, not an English major. Clearly that influenced my review.

      And you’re definitely not alone in the miss-mash memory dept. of previously read books. Sometimes I’ll say to someone, “Oh, that was a great book. You should definitely read it.” And then that person will ask, “So, what’s it about?” and my mind will draw a total blank except for the vague memory that I really liked it.

      We might need two couches in Dr. Diver’s office. Hopefully we can get the group fee on that session.

  2. on ,
    Marcia said:

    “On the flip side, however, I had a really hard time looking past a few things that just didn’t sit well with me. Like the way Dick Diver seriously crossed some ethical and professional boundaries by being the doctor for his wife’s mental health treatment. Or the way Nicole’s initial diagnosis came about and later, when it’s revealed why she had her initial breakdown, how that reason is simply overlooked. And then there’s Rosemary, the up and coming Hollywood starlet who is practically shoved into the arms of the very married Dr. Diver by her own mother.”
    AFTER READING THIS SEGMENT OF YOUR OVERVIEW, I TOO WOULD HAVE A HARD TIME GETTING PAST THE THIN BOUNDARIES.

    • Dr. Diver totally violated some serious boundaries in this book. So did his supervisors and the other doctors at the clinic where Nicole was being treated. I just couldn’t look past that stuff.

  3. It’s fascinating how one’s own expertise and knowledge can influence the experience of a book. Although it sounds in this case like you may not have liked it anyway. I haven’t read it, but it sounds like one of those worthy but depressing books that one benefits from reading, even if one isn’t sure why. 😉
    Of Fitzgerald’s books, I’ve only read Gatsby, although it was a while ago.

    I’ll be interested to hear your thoughts on Shadow of the Wind. I began reading it a while ago, and had to put it down to go travelling (couldn’t get it on my kindle at the time) and never quite made it back! It’s one of several books sitting beside my bed with a bookmark in it. doh!

    • Yeah, doing what I do for a living certainly colored my view on this book. I probably should have read it before going to grad school. It has a lot going for it, so I recommend reading it.

      I’m only about 1/4 of the way into Shadow of the Wind and I’m liking it so far. At least there aren’t any psychologists/psychiatrists/therapists who are dating, then marrying, then treating their spouses. 😉

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