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novella said:There is no hype about FSF, he just has an earned, good reputation. He broke some important ground in American literature. The art of Fitzgerald is that his writing is both modern, decribing the modern human (1920s American) condition, and making such eloquent reference in his language to Keats and Wordsworth and the structured classism of society at the time. He's not just a 1920s novelist, but one who bridges, in my opinion, the linguistic and artistic gap between Romanticism and Modernism. And also fully describes early 20th century American upper class idiocy with wit and depth.
novella said:There is no hype about FSF, he just has an earned, good reputation. He broke some important ground in American literature. The art of Fitzgerald is that his writing is both modern, decribing the modern human (1920s American) condition, and making such eloquent reference in his language to Keats and Wordsworth and the structured classism of society at the time. He's not just a 1920s novelist, but one who bridges, in my opinion, the linguistic and artistic gap between Romanticism and Modernism. And also fully describes early 20th century American upper class idiocy with wit and depth.
maey said:My brief, but comprehensive analysis ;-) (I hope those aren't oxymorons):
Sun-SSS said:Did I read somewhere that you are only 16, and not well read?
I stand in awe. My faith in the younger generation begins to be restored. I used to mark papers sometimes, not long ago, with much wailing and gnashing of teeth at the ever reducing vocabulary range of this post-modern era, and the clumsy way people put their thoughts together. Yours is different.
I can add nothing to what has already been posted on The Great Gatsby. Eloquence, comes to mind. And characterisation. Fitzgerald's characters, while not all likeable, are always interesting, and so so believable.
maey said:Fitzgerald has an eloquent writing style and he cleverly uses Nick Carraway as the narrator. In the beginning of the novel Nick presents himself as a trustworthy and tolerant person who is “inclined to reserve all judgments”.
The inclination to reserve judgment is what I especially appreciate in Nick’s character above all other characters. He is able to look beyond the rough edges of people, such as the dishonesty in the most vivacious Jordan Baker and the suave persona Gatsby tries to put on to cover up the love-sick soldier he shelters within himself.
Vinsecula said:My personal favorite character was Meyer Wolfsheim. For some reason, I kept picturing him as Elliot Gould...
Vinsecula said:And I stick to that. While the story, the characters, all of it feels very true to human nature, Nick Carraway's narration of it is what spoils it. His diction is completely full of itself, and I think that may be some of F. Scott's arrogance gleaming through in Nick.
The introduction features a poem attributed to Thomas Parke D'Invilliers, who is actually a character from Fitzgerald's first novel This Side Of Paradise.
Early in the book, Tom Buchanan describes to Nick a book he's reading, "Rise of the Colored Empire" by some Goddard. This book is a play on T. Lothrop Stoddard's book, "The Rising Tide of Color" printed about 1922. Fitzgerald obviously didn't want to use the real title and author (whether for dislike or era-appropriateness).
The college that Jay Gatsby was said to have attended for a few days ("disliking it because he had to support himself with janitor work"), St. Olaf College, is a liberal arts college located in Northfield, Minnesota, a short drive from where Fitzgerald grew up.
The situation of the Great Gatsby, a wealthy man of mystery haunting the society of his lost love, may owe something to Alexandre Dumas, père's Count of Monte Cristo.
The character of Meyer Wolfsheim in the novel is based on Arnold Rothstein, the real-life kingpin suspected to be behind the fixing of the 1919 World Series.
Fitzgerald originally wanted to title the novel Trimalchio in West Egg, after the character Trimalchio in The Satyricon that Gatsby resembles.
After The Great Gatsby went to press, Fitzgerald decided to change the title of the novel to "Under the Red, White, and Blue." He sent a telegram to his publisher asking whether it was too late to change it. (It was.)
The Great Gatsby was sometimes read out loud by Andy Kaufman in a faux British accent as a type of anti-humor.
Famous American author Truman Capote was originally hired as the screenwriter for the 1974 film adaptation of The Great Gatsby. In his screenplay, Nick Carraway and Jordan Baker were both written to be homosexual. Capote was removed from the project; Coppola rewrote the screenplay.
Seattle-based rock band Gatsby's American Dream derived their name from an obvious theme in the book.
Gatsby's copy of Hoppalong Cassidy is dated 1906, which is not possible since it was published in 1910.
East Egg and West Egg are thinly disguised versions of Port Washington and Great Neck, New York.
Business man Bill Gates has the words "It took me this long to reach the blue lawn." inscribed in his library which represent a famous quote from the book.
. . .one of those men who reach such an acute limited excellence at twenty-one that everything afterwards savours of anticlimax.
I felt that Tom would drift n forever seeking a little wistfully for th drmatic turbulence of some irrecoverable football game.
Wilson? He thinks she goes to see her sister in New York. He's so dumb he doesn't know he's alive.