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The "Great Gatsby" and "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" (Collector's Library)

von F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Great Gatsby has long been celebrated as the archetypal American novel, and its influence on later writers from J.D. Salinger to John OHara cannot be overestimated. Fitzgerald looks deeply into himself and his milieu to create the story of James Gatz, a self-educated nobody from Kentucky who has amassed a fortune and adopted the persona of Jay Gatsby, an Oxford-educated man about town, for the sole purpose of winning back the heart of Daisy, the woman he loved in his youth. Daisy is now married to Tom Buchanan a brutal, ignorant racist who embodies the corruption that can come with unlimited wealth. As Gatsby, Daisy and Tom play out the drama in a small Long Island town, Fitzgerald makes it clear that life is meaningless when it is based on money and glamour at the expense of the solid American values of self-reliance and hard work.… (mehr)
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I'm not really sure why The Great Gatsby is considered one of the best books of all time, it's an ok book, but I don't really see what's so spectacular about it. It reminded me a lot of Breakfast at Tiffany's (although of course it was written before that) in that it's a study of an odd character reported on by someone who's close to them, but they are always out of reach. The characters of The Great Gatsby all subtley and carefully fulfil their roles. The prose is spectacularly easy to read and descriptions jump off the page. It's an enjoyable book to read (although the ending left me feeling a bit cheated) and has some interesting comment on society of the time, but I'm not sure I see why it's considered so great.

The Diamond As Big as the Ritz is a short story which makes a nice contrast in style with the accompanying Great Gatsby, while maintaining the themes. Fitzgerald is still talking about money and love and how the two can be blind to each other, but this story is far more of a fairytale. The characters all have a single focus and the world they live in is fantastical. It's a charming little story with some very dark aspects. ( )
  sulkyblue | May 9, 2007 |
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The Great Gatsby has long been celebrated as the archetypal American novel, and its influence on later writers from J.D. Salinger to John OHara cannot be overestimated. Fitzgerald looks deeply into himself and his milieu to create the story of James Gatz, a self-educated nobody from Kentucky who has amassed a fortune and adopted the persona of Jay Gatsby, an Oxford-educated man about town, for the sole purpose of winning back the heart of Daisy, the woman he loved in his youth. Daisy is now married to Tom Buchanan a brutal, ignorant racist who embodies the corruption that can come with unlimited wealth. As Gatsby, Daisy and Tom play out the drama in a small Long Island town, Fitzgerald makes it clear that life is meaningless when it is based on money and glamour at the expense of the solid American values of self-reliance and hard work.

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