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The Great Gatsby

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(1925)

July 9th, 2002: - We have just been informed that this book is still in copyright and therefore we have had to remove the text from the site. In place of the text we have added a chapter by chapter summary. Please note the search feature searches through this summary, not the text.

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This novel shows the basic instinct of human beings to be admired as someone special even if this instinct leads, like moths attracted by the fire, towards burned wings.--Submitted by Mahawa Cheikh Gueye

The hollow pursuit of wealth and social status results in tragedy in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. Each character has their own way of showing off their wealth and status. Whether it's by the type of car you drive or the location of your house or even through marriage, it's all shown in this novel.--Submitted by Anonymous

The Great Gatsby is set in the jazz age, the 1920's. It tells the fictional story of an enigmatic and lonely millionaire named Jay Gatsby, who has been in love with the same woman for years and tries to win her back. The narrator is Nick, who lives across the lawn from Gatsby and becomes friends with him. This book written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, one of the greatest authors of all time shows that no matter how rich we are, it cannot buy us love.--Submitted by Anna

This novel is beautiful in every way. It is filled with a haunting sadness, that I have never been able to forget. The prose is beautiful -- glowing like Daisy's green light across the water. The story itself is beautifully tragic -- a poor man falls in love with a beautiful, rich woman (or what she represents) and it brings disaster. But this book is so much more than that. What F. Scott Fitzgerald shows the reader about this society we, ourselves, have created is larger than any story a person could think up. Fitzgerald creates a portrait of the hollowness, carelessness, and ugliness in American society that moved my old English teacher to tears in front of the whole class a few years ago, and brings a lump to my throat even now, as I think about it. If someone asked me what exactly The Great Gatsby "means," I couldn't tell them. I don't think anyone will ever be able to understand it enough to put it in words that will have meaning to everyone, but I think anyone who reads this book WILL have an understanding of it that they can feel in the gut. Such is the way with all great literature.--Submitted by Anonymous

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Summary Chp. 1
It is the late spring of 1922. Nick Carraway, the narrator and central character in the novel, introduces himself. Nick is a mid-westerner, an Ivy League graduate, and a veteran of World War 1. Feeling restless after the war he has decided to leave the mid-west to come to New York and work in the bond business. He rents a small house on Long Island. He takes the train to and from the City to work. Nick has a wealthy neighbor in a very big house next door a man named Gatsby. Also on Long Island, but across the bay from Nicks place, live his old friends Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Tom was Nicks college classmate, and Daisy is Nicks second cousin. Nick has not seen them in recent years, but he becomes reacquainted since they live so close by. He goes to their place across the bay for dinner. Tom Buchanan is very rich, very physical, and very arrogant about his position of privilege. He sees the world in terms of class and race distinctions. Daisy is beautiful. In the way she looks, and the way she speaks, she is enchanting: Her face was sad and lovely with bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth but there was an excitement in her voice that men who cared for her found difficult to forget. Tom is just as attracted to Daisy as the next fellow, but he has a mistress as well. Nick meets Daisys friend Jordan Baker, a golfer, a slender small breasted girl with an erect carriage which she accented by throwing her body back at the shoulders like a young cadet. Tom and Daisy have a child, and they have plenty of money, and in his hard way Tom seems to have things the way he wants them. But Daisy is unhappy. In the evening, after returning home from dinner with the Buchanans and Jordan Baker, Nick glimpses his rich neighbor Gatsby standing on the lawn of his big house, facing the bay, and staring out into it.

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