Answer and Explanation:
Both writers were literary icons that transcended their time, although both did it with different optics.
F. Scott Fitzgerald was based on a look with two edges: on the one hand, the glamor and luxury of the roaring twenties, New York and its lights; on the other, the loneliness that all that lifestyle brought back. It was a bright and gloomy world at the same time, as it shows in his work The Great Gatsby.
Ernest Hemingway, on the other hand, was a writer whose work was largely influenced by the world wars. He showed a 1920s, marked by the open wounds of the First World War. Somber, hopeless, his writings were part of himself, as evidenced by his death by killing himself in 1961.