Written in six weeks and drawing from the life she shared with F Scott
Fitzgerald, Save Me the Waltz is a classic novel of one woman's
experience in a fast-moving Jazz Age society.
Alabama Beggs is a Southern belle who makes her début into adulthood
with wild parties, dancing and drinking, and flirting with the young
officers posted to her hometown during World War I. When Lieutenant
David Knight arrives to join her line of suitors, Alabama marries
him--and their life in New York, Paris, and the South of France closely
mirrors the Fitzgeralds' own life and their prominent socializing in the
1920s and 1930s. In Paris, Alabama becomes fixated on becoming a prima
ballerina and refuses to accept that she might not become the great
dancer that she longs to be, threatening her mental health and her
marriage.
Save Me the Waltz is a relic from The Lost Generation and the
brilliant introduction from Erin Templeton shows how Alabama's struggles
mirrored Zelda's own, particularly her need to have a life of her own
rather than living in her husband's shadow.