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  1. 20 de dez. de 2013 · By The New Yorker. December 20, 2013. In 1918, Zelda Sayre, later Zelda Fitzgerald, won a prize for this story, which she published in the Sidney Lanier High School Literary Journal. She...

  2. 20 de dez. de 2013 · Zelda Fitzgerald, Zelda Sayre (AKA), Roman Muradov (Illustrator) 3.12. 26 ratings3 reviews. In 1918, Zelda Sayre, later Zelda Fitzgerald, won a prize for this story, which she published in the Sidney Lanier High School Literary Journal.

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  3. by. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Zelda Fitzgerald, Julia Finkernagel (Editor), Alexander Pechmann (Translator) 3.64 avg rating — 492 ratings — published 1924 — 18 editions. Want to Read. saving….

  4. Description. In 1918, Zelda Sayre, later Zelda Fitzgerald, won a prize for this story, which she published in the Sidney Lanier High School Literary Journal. She was seventeen or eighteen years old when she wrote it; she would soon meet F. Scott Fitzgerald, he... Read more.

  5. Fitzgerald drew upon Zelda's intense feelings about the Confederacy and the Old South in his 1920 short story The Ice Palace about a Southern girl who becomes lost in an ice maze while visiting a northern town.

  6. 24 de dez. de 2013 · USA TODAY. 0:09. 1:28. Here's a look at what's buzzing in the book world today: Tip of the iceberg:The New Yorker has published a "recently unearthed" story by Zelda Fitzgerald (written...

  7. Zelda Fitzgerald. Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, born Zelda Sayre, was a novelist and the wife of writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. She was an icon of the 1920s—dubbed by her husband "the first American Flapper". After the success of his first novel This Side of Paradise (1920), the Fitzgeralds became celebrities.