Therese Anne Fowler's 6 favorite books

The author recommends works by Edith Wharton and Zelda Fitzgerald

Therese Anne Fowler

Save Me the Waltz by Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald (out of print). A modernist, semi-autobiographical novel about a tormented ballet dancer and her tormented artist husband. Published by Scribner's but heavily edited — first by F. Scott Fitzgerald, in order to "control the message" — it has moments of brilliance and begs for further care and development.

Loving Frank by Nancy Horan (Ballantine, $15). To be a woman of passion and ambition in the early 20th century was to invite scandal, scorn, and personal anguish. Horan's 2007 novel gives us the real characters Martha Borthwick and her lover, Frank Lloyd Wright, as Borthwick struggles to balance her conflicting desires to be writer, mother, lover, and individual.

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