Alex's Reviews > The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby
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** spoiler alert **
The Great Gatsby is your neighbor you're best friends with until you find out he's a drug dealer. It charms you with some of the most elegant English prose ever published, making it difficult to discuss the novel without the urge to stammer awestruck about its beauty. It would be evidence enough to argue that F. Scott Fitzgerald was superhuman, if it wasn't for the fact that we know he also wrote This Side of Paradise.
But despite its magic, the rhetoric is just that, and it is a cruel facade. Behind the stunning glitter lies a story with all the discontent and intensity of the early Metallica albums. At its heart, The Great Gatsby throws the very nature of our desires into a harsh, shocking light. There may never be a character who so epitomizes tragically misplaced devotion as Jay Gatsby, and Daisy, his devotee, plays her part with perfect, innocent malevolence. Gatsby's competition, Tom Buchanan, stands aside watching, taunting and provoking with piercing vocal jabs and the constant boast of his enviable physique. The three jostle for position in an epic love triangle that lays waste to countless innocent victims, as well as both Eggs of Long Island. Every jab, hook, and uppercut is relayed by the instantly likable narrator Nick Carraway, seemingly the only voice of reason amongst all the chaos. But when those boats are finally borne back ceaselessly by the current, no one is left afloat. It is an ethical massacre, and Fitzgerald spares no lives; there is perhaps not a single character of any significance worthy even of a Sportsmanship Award from the Boys and Girls Club.
In a word, The Great Gatsby is about deception; Fitzgerald tints our glasses rosy with gorgeous prose and a narrator you want so much to trust, but leaves the lenses just translucent enough for us to see that Gatsby is getting the same treatment. And if Gatsby represents the truth of the American Dream, it means trouble for us all. Consider it the most pleasant insult you'll ever receive.
But despite its magic, the rhetoric is just that, and it is a cruel facade. Behind the stunning glitter lies a story with all the discontent and intensity of the early Metallica albums. At its heart, The Great Gatsby throws the very nature of our desires into a harsh, shocking light. There may never be a character who so epitomizes tragically misplaced devotion as Jay Gatsby, and Daisy, his devotee, plays her part with perfect, innocent malevolence. Gatsby's competition, Tom Buchanan, stands aside watching, taunting and provoking with piercing vocal jabs and the constant boast of his enviable physique. The three jostle for position in an epic love triangle that lays waste to countless innocent victims, as well as both Eggs of Long Island. Every jab, hook, and uppercut is relayed by the instantly likable narrator Nick Carraway, seemingly the only voice of reason amongst all the chaos. But when those boats are finally borne back ceaselessly by the current, no one is left afloat. It is an ethical massacre, and Fitzgerald spares no lives; there is perhaps not a single character of any significance worthy even of a Sportsmanship Award from the Boys and Girls Club.
In a word, The Great Gatsby is about deception; Fitzgerald tints our glasses rosy with gorgeous prose and a narrator you want so much to trust, but leaves the lenses just translucent enough for us to see that Gatsby is getting the same treatment. And if Gatsby represents the truth of the American Dream, it means trouble for us all. Consider it the most pleasant insult you'll ever receive.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
December 24, 2007
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Comments Showing 1-50 of 75 (75 new)
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Nicole
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rated it 2 stars
Apr 12, 2008 04:51PM

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I don't think the author wanted to capture love. Overall, its not about love. But loosing yourself somewhere along the way and trying to get back to the same spot... For Gatsby, its his love for daisy. Gatsby will forever love daisy, but he's too late.
The story is about reckless people who lead reckless lives, smashing everything in their way. Nick is mad at daisy and Tom for that reason, they just go back to their lives as if nothing happened. People like that exist though, sadly.
A person who chases a goal that's long in his past. Fitzgerald mentions the green light over and over again. Green light is not love. It's gatsby's dream that is in the past. Which is his love for daisy. But every person has different dreams when they close their eyes.
He's trying to bluntly tell us to stop chasing a dream that's gone. Stop chasing the past. There's a beautiful part in the book that is long to post here, you can find it in the quotes probably, where nick talks about gatsby's dream and the green light. It screams this, he's being so straightforward in his message. The parties, the country it takes place in have nothing to do with the message. Just part of his setting. Notice how there's no main character (other than nick) that is without faults. Everyone is bad. But the one who lives in the past dies. Extreme. It's a lesson about dark and cruel life. Let the past go. Let it be. Find a meaning in life. (to Nicole's comment)
That's what I saw while reading the book. I am a fan of the book, so maybe that's why haha.
:)




I am reading The Great Gatsby after about fifteen years, and many aspects you point out, I agree with. Fitzgerald's beautiful prose and storytelling is a juxtaposition of each other....we see the beauty of the writn, but the ugliness of the story which is sadly Gatsby's displaced perception he has on Daisy.

No, you aren't. I didn't take "drug dealer" literally either when I read it. I thought the OP was just using that as an example.



And it was made into a movie too. Can't remember the actors, maybe Robert Redford?






The book is just amazing
It feels like you can read it over and over again and it will never get boring