Careless People

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Authors: Sarah Churchwell

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ALSO BY SARAH CHURCHWELL

The Many Lives of Marilyn Monroe

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Published by The Penguin Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2014

Copyright © 2013 by Sarah Churchwell

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First published in Great Britain by Virago Press

Excerpt from “The Flapper” from
Complete Poems
by Dorothy Parker. Copyright © 1999 by The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Used by permission of Penguin Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC.

Excerpts from heretofore unpublished works by F. Scott Fitzgerald and by Zelda Fitzgerald. Used by permission of David Higham Associates.

Excerpts from the following works by Zelda Fitzgerald:
Save Me the Waltz
(Scribner, New York; Random House, London),
Dear Scott, Dearest Zelda
(St. Martin's Press, New York; Bloomsbury, London) and
The Collected Writings
(Scribner, New York; Abacus, London). Used by permission of David Higham Associates.

Map illustration by John Gilkes

Illustration credits appear
here
.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Churchwell, Sarah Bartlett, 1970–

Careless people : murder, mayhem, and the invention of the Great Gatsby / Sarah Churchwell.

pages cm

Previously published: London : Virago, 2013.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN 978-0-698-15163-5

1. Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott), 1896–1940. Great Gatsby. 2. Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott), 1896–1940. 3. Fitzgerald, Zelda, 1900–1948. 4. Murder—New Jersey—New Brunswick Region—History—20th century. 5. New York (N.Y.)—Social life and customs—20th century. I. Title. II. Title: Murder, mayhem, and the invention of the Great Gatsby.

PS3511.I9G83185 2014

813'.52—dc23

2013028116

Designed by Gretchen Achilles

Version_1

TO WJA

You've got [the] gift of going after the beauty that's concealed under the facts; and goddammit, that's all there is to art.

—
DEEMS TAYLOR TO F. SCOTT FITZGERALD
, 1925

The fancy cannot cheat so well

As she is fam'd to do . . .

—
JOHN KEATS
, “Ode to a Nightingale”

GUEST LIST

THE GREAT GATSBY

NICK CARRAWAY,
narrator, the only honest man he knows

JAY GATSBY,
bootlegger and idolater, who springs from a Platonic conception of himself

DAISY BUCHANAN,
the woman he loves, with a voice full of money

TOM BUCHANAN,
millionaire playboy, Daisy's malicious husband

MYRTLE WILSON,
social climber, a woman of tremendous vitality, and Tom Buchanan's mistress

GEORGE WILSON,
her husband, mechanic, a spiritless, anemic man

JORDAN BAKER,
cheating golfer, Daisy's friend, and Nick Carraway's sometime girlfriend

MEYER WOLFSHIEM,
gangster, Jay Gatsby's partner

NEW YORK

F. SCOTT FITZGERALD,
writer

ZELDA SAYRE FITZGERALD,
his wife

EDMUND WILSON,
JR.,
writer and critic

BURTON RASCOE,
literary editor, New York
Tribune

JOHN DOS PASSOS,
writer

RING LARDNER,
writer

CARL VAN VECHTEN,
writer and photographer

ERNEST BOYD,
Irish writer and critic

HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE,
editor, New York
World

DEEMS TAYLOR,
music critic, New York
World

DOROTHY PARKER,
writer

GENE BUCK,
Broadway producer and songwriter

HELEN BUCK,
his wife

EDWARD E. (TED) PARAMORE,
playboy

NEW BRUNSWICK

ELEANOR REINHARDT MILLS,
wife, mother, choir singer, murder victim

JAMES MILLS,
janitor and church sexton, her husband

CHARLOTTE MILLS,
their daughter

EDWARD WHEELER HALL,
husband, rector of church of St. John, murder victim

FRANCES STEVENS HALL,
his wife

WILLIE STEVENS,
her brother

HENRY H. STEVENS,
her other brother

MRS. JANE GIBSON,
the Pig Woman

JENNY,
her mule

RAYMOND SCHNEIDER,
roustabout

PEARL BAHMER,
his girlfriend

NICHOLAS BAHMER,
her father, bootlegger

INSPECTORS BEEKMAN AND MOTT,
prosecutors

AND ASSORTED GATE-CRASHERS,
including Joseph Conrad, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Albert Einstein, Friedrich Nietzsche, Tallulah Bankhead, Ernest Hemingway, Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, the Ku Klux Klan, and a host of bootleggers . . .

PREFACE

O
n Thursday, September 14, 1922, in St. Paul, Minnesota, a popular young writer named F. Scott Fitzgerald and his glamorous wife, Zelda, were finishing their preparations to move to New York. Fitzgerald had wired his agent the day before, promising that a short story he was finishing called “Winter Dreams,” which he would later describe as a “sort of 1st draft of the Gatsby idea,” would reach the agency's Manhattan office by Monday. A few months earlier, he had told his editor of his dreams for his next novel: “
I want to write something
new
—something extraordinary and beautiful and simple and intricately patterned.” For the last two years, Fitzgerald's writing had been popular, highly paid, and celebrated. But now he wanted to do something different, more ambitious: “
the very best I am capable of . . . or even as I feel sometimes, something better than I am capable of.” It would take him another two years to finish the book he would eventually call
The Great Gatsby
.

The same Thursday, a thousand miles to the east, a pretty young woman sat in a hot, cramped upstairs apartment in New Brunswick, New Jersey, reading a novel. At thirty-four she didn't look old enough to have teenage children, or to have been married for seventeen years. She was wearing her favorite dress, dark blue with cheerful red polka dots, and was avoiding the housework, as usual, to finish the book. She always lost herself in romances, but this one was special: it had been given to her by the married man with whom, for three years now, she had been having an increasingly passionate affair. They shared what they read with each other, talked about running away, and poured their feelings into letters that they exchanged when they met. That night, she would wait for her lover at their usual rendezvous near
an abandoned farmhouse on the outskirts of town, carrying letters filled with the dreams that had been inspired by the novels she loved.

That moonless night Eleanor Mills and her lover would both be shot through the head; their bodies were discovered together two days later under a crab apple tree, their love letters scattered around the corpses. Eleanor Mills would never read the novel F. Scott Fitzgerald was beginning to plan, but as he made his way across America, Fitzgerald would read about her.

This book is about the world that prompted F. Scott Fitzgerald to write
The Great Gatsby
,
tracing the relationship between that world and the novel that it inspired, including the largely forgotten story of the brutal slaying of an adulterous couple, a murder mystery that held all of America spellbound at the end of 1922.

Fitzgerald began drafting
The Great Gatsby
during the summer of 1923, while he and Zelda were living in Great Neck, Long Island. He was also revising a play and writing magazine fiction, and he and Zelda were enthusiastically partying, all of which made work on his third novel sporadic. In the spring of 1924 the Fitzgeralds sailed for France, where he began writing in earnest his novel about modern America. He published
The Great
Gatsby
a year later, in April 1925. After some hesitation about dates, he had eventually decided to set his story across the summer and into the autumn of 1922.

I started with a simple question: why 1922? A conventional answer has been that Fitzgerald wanted to signal his allegiance to the annus mirabilis
of literary modernism, the year that began with the publication of James Joyce's
Ulysses
and ended with the publication of T. S. Eliot's
The Waste Land
. But while that may be part of the answer, the meanings of 1922 in relation to
The Great Gatsby
are far more expansive than that. It was a remarkable year, both in artistic and historical terms; an astonishing number of landmark events occurred, some (but by no means all) of which this book retraces. In his 1931 essay “Echoes of the Jazz Age,” Fitzgerald would “offer in exhibit the year 1922!” for anyone hoping to understand the roaring
twenties: “it was an age of miracles, it was an age of art, it was an age of excess, and it was an age of satire.”

As
Gatsby
was inspired by the Fitzgeralds' eighteen months in Great Neck, beginning in late 1922, I tried to find the exact date of their return to New York that autumn, but no biographer or scholar had fixed it. Some said it was mid- or late September, most that it was October. On September 22, 1922, their friend Edmund Wilson wrote a letter saying he'd seen Scott and Zelda the previous night at the Plaza, and they'd been in town for “several days,” but that still left us approximating. Eventually I found a telegram from Fitzgerald in the Princeton archives, dated Monday, September 18, 1922, informing his editor, Max Perkins, that they would arrive in New York two days later.

This date might seem insignificant, but it was the day after the story broke of the murders of Eleanor Mills and Edward Hall, as papers across America detailed the lurid events in New Brunswick, a town just up the road from Fitzgerald's alma mater, Princeton University. As the weeks passed, the story grew ever bigger; it would dominate the nation's headlines for the rest of the year.

One of the first histories of the 1920s, written in 1931, declared that the killing of Eleanor Mills and Edward Hall had been “
the murder of the decade”: “The Hall–Mills case had all the elements needed to satisfy an exacting public taste for the sensational . . . It was grisly, it was dramatic (the bodies being laid side by side as if to emphasize an unhallowed union), it involved wealth and respectability, it had just the right amount of sex interest—and in addition it took place close to the great metropolitan nerve-center of the American press.” The author concluded with a description of the case's eccentric details: “It was an illiterate American who did not shortly become acquainted with De Russey's Lane, the crab apple tree, the pig woman and her mule, the precise mental condition of Willie Stevens, and the gossip of the choir members.”

The Hall–Mills case has, until now, been considered in relation to
The Great
Gatsby
only by a handful of scholars in brief articles, and in a few footnotes, but it is my contention that this remarkable story amplifies and
enriches the context of
Gatsby
in many more ways than have yet been appreciated. Everyone knows that
The Great Gatsby
offers a connoisseur's guide to the glamor and glitter of the Jazz Age, but the world that furnished
Gatsby
is far darker—and stranger—than perhaps we recognize.

When
Gatsby
was published most of its initial reviewers dismissed it as mere melodrama, the type of story found in the movies or in the papers every day; here was a novel that surely would not stand the test of time, they sniffed. As far as its first readers were concerned,
The Great Gatsby
was covered in newsprint—and for many, this made it disposable and ephemeral, a mere tabloid tale. Even positive reviews returned repeatedly to the sense that it was a story ripped from the newspapers: “
You pick up your morning paper and see a headline,” wrote one typical assessment: “
NEW EVIDENCE IN SMART SET'S MURDER
. ‘The Great Gatsby' is a perfect picture of the life that produces those headlines. It is the story that the morning paper never gives you.” The reviewer imagined that Fitzgerald had said to himself as he started
Gatsby
, “The newspaper tells [the reader] what happened, but it never makes it clear enough. The reader wants to know
why
it happened. He wants to know how in thunder such a thing
could
happen. I'll show him how!”

In a sense, this book reverses that imaginary process, trying to suggest how, and why,
The Great Gatsby
could have happened.
Careless People
began as a species of biography—the biography of a book—seeking the origins of
Gatsby
,
especially
in relation to 1922
and to the role these notorious murders may have played in its inception. But along the way it became about something more: it also reconstructs a remarkable moment in America's history, at the dizzying center of which stood Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, trying to navigate their unsteady way through it.

Using newspaper reports, biography, correspondence, the Fitzgeralds' scrapbooks, and other archival material, I piece together a collage of the Fitzgeralds' world, to tell not only their story but also that of the other remarkable people and noteworthy events swirling around them. This factual account is threaded through with Fitzgerald's fictional account in
The Great Gatsby
.
The two mirror, reflect, and amplify each other, a kind of two-part invention in which fact and fiction are in contrapuntal relation.

This book brings to bear original research into the news stories of 1922, as well as previously unused and newly discovered archival material about the Fitzgeralds and
The Great Gatsby
, although it is by no means the case, of course, that all of the sources I use in this book are new. I have depended greatly on the work of other scholars, and in addition to the notes and bibliography, a word on sources at the end will explain in a bit more detail my debts to and departures from these sources. Many of these sources are known only to scholars, however, and even readers familiar with them will find here, I believe, new facts, new documents, and new connections. Newspapers obviously became central to my story, as I traced not only that autumn's events, but more specifically some of the daily journalism that Fitzgerald himself was reading at the time.

Scott and Zelda kept careful scrapbooks, preserving every mention of his books and career—and of their well-publicized escapades—that they could find, but they almost never dated those clippings and only infrequently jotted down the papers from which they came. Working through the New York papers from the autumn of 1922, I was able to identify the sources and dates of many of Fitzgerald's anonymous clippings. It seems reasonable to assume that he at least glanced at the newspaper from which they came—like most writers then, Fitzgerald subscribed to a clipping service for national and international papers, but he also read the New York papers regularly. Radio would explode into American homes at the end of 1922, but it would not broadcast news for several more years; Americans depended almost entirely upon print journalism for information. Everyone read the papers, often more than one a day, and for a writer like Fitzgerald they were a vital source of news and gossip. Throughout the book I have used headlines from the New York papers—all taken from the Jazz Age, between 1920 and 1929—to help suggest the ways in which Fitzgerald was often reflecting and reworking the myriad stories around him, and to help the reader navigate the various streams of the story.

Although 1922 is the crux of the tale, it will sometimes shift and jump in time, just as discussions of the novel will not be fixed by the progression of Fitzgerald's plot.
The Great Gatsby
is a hymn to language, a book about its
possibilities, and so this book is also sometimes about language. Some of my allusions to Fitzgerald's language are less signposted than others: scattered throughout the book I've used some of Fitzgerald's phrases in other contexts, to suggest other ideas, for one of the themes of this book is the importance of context to determine meaning. (I have silently corrected his notoriously bad spelling, except in the case of the fictional gangster Meyer Wolfshiem, as the convention is to spell his name as it was first printed. Readers who are interested can find Fitzgerald's original spellings reproduced verbatim in biographies and published collections of his letters.)

Filaments of fact and fiction shed different lights on each other, and also throw shadows back on us. One of
The Great Gatsby
's
greatest pleasures is its suggestiveness: even if one could pin all its meanings down, such an effort would flout the entire spirit of the novel. Instead of trying to be definitive, what follows mixes explication with intimation, trying to suggest how inspiration might have worked. It would be foolhardy for anyone to promise to tell the whole story about Fitzgerald's masterpiece, but it does seem possible to tell
a
whole, true story about its creation, and about the chaotic, fugitive world from which it sprang. “
I
insist
on reading meanings into things,” Fitzgerald told Max Perkins near the end of his life, an idea which this book takes as an article of faith.

Most of my story occurs over the last four months of 1922, a period that reveals an amazing amount about Fitzgerald's novel.
Although some of his sources and inspirations date from 1923 and 1924 it is also the case that nearly all of the significant sources connect back in one way or another to that year, a year that proves to have been a turning point.

In fact, the story of that autumn in 1922 is so remarkable that it would deserve retelling in its own right, even if Scott Fitzgerald had not gotten there first.
But Fitzgerald usually got there first. In addition to his sheer talent for writing, a gift that made other writers admire and envy him in equal measure, Fitzgerald often had an uncanny ability to guess right, an intuition that could be staggeringly prescient.

In 1920, when Fitzgerald was only twenty-three years old, a friend noted in his diary: “
Fitz argued about various things. Mind absolutely
undisciplined but guesses right,—intuition marvelous . . . Senses the exact mood & drift of a situation so surely & quickly—much better at this than any of rest of us.” Eventually, Fitzgerald came to understand this about himself as well, later telling Zelda: “
for all your superior observation and your harder intelligence I have a faculty of guessing right, without evidence even with a certain wonder as to why and whence that mental short cut came.”
The Great Gatsby
is a marvel of intuition, of this faculty for guessing right; it reveals Fitzgerald's instinctive grasp of the meanings of the era he has come to epitomize—and it is also a prophetic glimpse into the world to come.

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