On October 20, 1936, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote to his daughter Frances Scott Fitzgerald, giving this advice:
Don’t be a bit discouraged about your story not being tops. At the same time, I am not going to encourage you about it, because, after all, if you want to get into the big time, you have to have your own fences to jump and learn from experience. Nobody ever became a writer just by wanting to be one. If you have anything to say, anything you feel nobody has ever said before, you have got to feel it so desperately that you will find some way to say it that nobody has ever found before, so that the thing you have to say and the way of saying it blend as one matter—as indissolubly as if they were conceived together.
(Quoted from page 303 of The Crack-Up, by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Edmund Wilson ed. New Direction Books, 1945.)
For a brief biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald, click here. For images of or relating to F. Scott Fitzgerald, click here.
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