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The Great Gatsby

There are many novels which claim that they are the greatest love story of all time. It is only in the case of this novel that that statement can be applied and be true.

The Great Gatsby is set during the roaring 1920s in America, narrated by Nick Carraway, a man from a well-to-do family just out of fighting the war and looking to sell bonds. He moves to East Egg, the slightly less grand area in comparison to West Egg, right opposite Gatsby's mansion. Gatsby is rich – mega-rich – and throws magnificent parties every weekend which the whole town attends. However, the host is never seen during the parties and is never completely known by anyone. Gatsby holds a dark secret about his past and how he became so great – a deep lust that will eventually lead to his demise.

The novel is similar to Romeo and Juliet in many ways, but I believe that it is so much more than just a love story. It is also a reflection on the hollowness of a life of leisure. Both stories are obsessed with controlling time – Juliet wants to extend her present, as her future prospects with Romeo are bleak and Gatsby wants to create a beautiful future by restoring the past. This is what leads Gatsby to say his most famous line "Can't change the past? Why, of course you can." I can very much relate to this, as there have been many moments where I've wished that I could go back to the past and just stay there.

Fitzgerald's writing is almost like a work of poetry, with waves of literary brilliance that create a rich and lush rhythm which you can almost tap your foot to. The descriptions are so jarringly, magnificently beautiful that it can almost make my heart ache.

The characters in The Great Gatsby are very flawed and very hard to sympathise with. But that’s the beauty of the book. Of course you hate Daisy Buchanan! Of course you hate Tom! You even begin to slightly dislike Gatsby, to whom it is not enough for Daisy to say that she loved him, but requires her to state that she never in her five-year-marriage loved her husband Tom. But Gatsby, to me, remains Great right until the end of this book.

It is ironic that only the idle rich survive this novel. Through this, Fitzgerald further enrages the reader about the cruelty and the injustice of the world. The rich are allowed to continue to be careless – for that is the dream, is it not? To live a carefree life? Yet, Fitzgerald highlights the horrors of being a careless person – “They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money and vast carelessness." What's amazing in this line is that Tom and Daisy aren't careless to be malicious - that is just their nature, which is a very sad thing. They do not care for their daughter, for Myrtle, for Gatsby nor even each other. Their inability to care is what makes the novel the stark opposite to Romeo and Juliet where the lovers are sacrificed and Verona is healed. In Fitzgerald's masterpiece, nothing is made whole by this tragedy.

Many consider The Great Gatsby to be depressing because, in the end, those who dream do not achieve their aspirations. However, Fitzgerald’s message is not that chasing a dream will lead to tragedy. It is chasing an unworthy dream.


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