Scott Fitzgerald first met Zelda Sayre at a dance at the Montgomery Country Club in 1918 while he was stationed in Alabama awaiting deployment to Europe and The Great War. Zelda was a beautiful, popular, and unconventional belle from a respectable Southern family. From the start, their courtship was both passionate and tempestuous. Zelda refused to commit herself at first and broke off their long-distance engagement at least once due to Scott’s uncertain finances and professional future. In the spring of 1920, however, Scott published his first novel, This Side of Paradise. The first 3,000 copies sold out in three days—it was an immediate bestseller. Zelda joined him straight away in New York and they married less than a week later. With the success of his first novel, Scott became an instant celebrity, along with his new, fashionable, and free-spirited bride. They were tastemakers, New York’s “it” couple. Zelda was charmingly wild, clever, and a modern, more independent woman—the quintessential flapper; Scott was a dashing, talented writer and spokesperson for their generation.