Review of 'The Great Gatsby'
From
James Topham
The Great Gatsby is probably F. Scott Fitzgerald's greatest novel--a book that offers
damning and insightful views of the American nouveau riche in the 1920s.
The Great Gatsby is an American classic and a wonderfully evocative
work.
Like much of Fitzgerald's
prose, it is neat and well--crafted. Fitzgerald seems to have had a brilliant
understanding of lives that are corrupted by greed and incredibly sad and
unfulfilled. The novel is a product of its generation--with one of American
literature's most powerful characters in the figure of Jay Gatsby, who is
urbane and world-weary. Gatsby is really nothing more than a man desperate for
love.
The novel's events are filtered through
the consciousness of its narrator, Nick Carraway, a young Yale graduate, who is
both a part of and separate from the world he describes. Upon moving to New
York, he rents a house next door to the mansion of an eccentric millionaire
(Jay Gatsby). Every Saturday, Gatsby throws a party at his mansion and all the
great and the good of the young fashionable world come to marvel at his
extravagance (as well as swap gossipy stories about their host who--it is suggested--has
a murky past).
Despite his high-living, Gatsby is
dissatisfied; and Nick finds out why. Long ago, Gatsby fell in love with a
young girl, Daisy. Although she has always loved Gatsby, she is currently
married to Tom Buchanan. Gatsby asks Nick to help him meet Daisy once more, and
Nick finally agrees--arranging tea for Daisy at his house.
The two ex-lovers meet and
soon rekindle their affair. Soon, Tom begins to suspect and challenges the two
of them--also revealing something that the reader had already begun to suspect:
that Gatsby's fortune was made through illegal gambling and bootlegging. Gatsby
and Daisy drive back to New York. In the wake of the emotional confrontation,
Daisy hits and kills a woman. Gatsby feels that his life would be nothing
without Daisy, so he determines to take the blame.
George Wilson--who discovers that the car
that killed his wife belongs to Gatsby--comes to Gatsby's house and shoots him.
Nick arranges a funeral for his friend, and then decides to leave New York--saddened
by the fatal events and disgusted by the easy way lived their lives.
Wealth as an Exploration of the Deeper Qualities of Life: The Great Gatsby
The power of Gatsby as a character is
inextricably linked with his wealth. From the very beginning of The Great
Gatsby, Fitzgerald sets up his eponymous hero as an enigma: the playboy
millionaire with the shady past who can enjoy the frivolity and ephemera that
he creates around him. However, the reality of the situation is that Gatsby is
a man in love. Nothing more. He concentrated all of his life on winning Daisy
back.
It is the way that he attempts to do this,
however, that is central to Fitzgerald's world-view. Gatsby creates
himself--both his mystique and his personality--around rotten values. They are
the values of the American dream--that money, wealth and popularity are all
there is to achieve in this world. He gives everything he has--emotionally and
physically--to win, and it is this unrestrained desire that contributes to his
eventual downfall.
Beyond Enjoyment? - The Great Gatsby
Beyond Enjoyment? - The Great Gatsby
In the closing pages of The Great
Gatsby, Nick considers Gatsby in a wider context. Nick links Gatsby with
the class of people with whom he has become so inextricably associated. They
are the society persons so prominent during the 1920's and 1930's. Like his
novel The Beautiful and the Damned, Fitzgerald attacks the shallow
social climbing and emotional manipulation--which only causes pain. With a
decadent cynicism, the party-goers in The Great Gatsby cannot see
anything beyond their own enjoyment. Gatsby's love is frustrated by the social
situation and his death symbolizes the dangers of his chosen path.
F. Scott Fitzgerald paints a picture of a
lifestyle and a decade that is both fascinating and horrific. In so doing, he
captures a society and a set of young people; and he wrote them into myth.
Fitzgerald was a part of that high-living lifestyle, but he was also a victim
of it. He was one of the beautiful but he was also forever damned. In all its
excitement--pulsating with life and tragedy--The Great Gatsby captures
brilliantly the American dream in a time when it had descended into decadence.
http://classiclit.about.com/od/greatgatsbythe/fr/aa_greatgatsby.htm?nl=1
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