· “In this richly imagined story, Erika Robuck has captured the creative brilliance and madness of Zelda Fitzgerald. Told through the eyes of a compassionate psychiatric nurse, Call Me Zelda is an unsettling yet tender portrayal of two women inextricably bound by hope and tragedy.” —Beth Hoffman, New York Times bestselling author ofBrand: Penguin Publishing Group. · Robuck, who first explored the lives and loves of authors in Hemingway's Girl, now turns to the tumultuous, codependent relationship of Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald. It's , and Anna Howard, a nurse who lost her husband and daughter in the Great War, is assigned to work with Zelda when she's committed to Baltimore's Phipps Psychiatric Clinic.5/5(43). ― Erika Robuck, Call Me Zelda. tags: cold, february. 2 likes. Like “The thing about trips is that all the trouble is in the anticipation.” ― Erika Robuck, Call Me Zelda. 1 likes. Like “It was so good going down, but the aftertaste made you damn near hate it.” ― Erika Robuck, Call Me Zelda. 1 likes. Like Author: Erika Robuck.
Call Me Zelda by Erika Robuck. J by Kate Lilly. Zelda Sayre (Fitzgerald) Between riding the roofs of New York taxis and swimming in fountains, legend has it the lives of F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife were almost as eventful as the lives of his characters in The Great Gatsby. www.doorway.ru: Call Me Zelda: A Novel () by Robuck, Erika and a great selection of similar New, Used and Collectible Books available now at great prices. Call Me Zelda by Erika Robuck Published by NAL Publication date: May 7th Genres: Fiction, Historical With another film version of The Great Gatsby coming out this week, now is the perfect time for new fiction about the life of the Fitzgeralds or, more specifically, Zelda Fitzgerald. There are many stories circulated about her outrageous behavior but it is much like the paparazzi today.
Publishers Weekly, Praise for Call Me Zelda "This gem of a novel spins a different, touching story You will love it, as I absolutely did."--Tatiana de Rosnay, New York Times bestselling author of Sarah's Key and The House I Loved "In this richly imagined story, Erika Robuck has captured the creative brilliance and madness of Zelda Fitzgerald an unsettling yet tender portrayal of two women inextricably bound by hope and tragedy.". Yet another addition to what is becoming a gracious plenty of novels and biographies focusing on the Scott-Zelda relationship. Robuck’s strategy is to create a first-person narrator, Anna Howard, who is Zelda’s nurse at Phipps Psychiatric Clinic in Baltimore when Zelda is hospitalized for schizophrenia in February of Call Me Zelda is a book of historical fiction about Zelda Fitzgerald as seen from the viewpoint of a caretaker, a nurse that is assigned to Zelda's case when she enters the Phipps Clinic in Baltimore in
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