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The Great GatsbyThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
Nick is our narrator in Fitzgerald's namesake title. Spoken in retrospect, we only recieve one view of the people and places described outside of dialogue. This is important in realizing what sort of person Jay Gatsby was, as we only see him through Nick's eyes, he may have established himself as different sort to his other 'friends.'
Nick moves himself to West Egg Staton Island after military obligations and into the house neighboring one Jay Gatsby, who shared the ranks with Nick in the first World War. The Great Gatsby throws extravagant parties and rarely do his guest take time to acknowledge their host. Nick finds himself caught in the line of love, when Gatsby reveals his purpose for the house on the sound and the life of parties. They were all a lure, a bait, to bring one Daisy Buchanon to his home. Daisy happens also to be Nick's cousin. When Tom Buchanon realizes Gatsby's intent Daisy is caught in the witness's satand in a debate of devotion. Tom, who hasn't always been true to Daisy, finds a crowd about the home of his mistress as he passes it with Nick and Jordan, another aquaintance of the lot, riding in his coupe. She had been struck by a car as she attempted to halt the oncoming driver. Daisy was the driver, but Tom convinced the unknowing mistress' husband that Gatsby was behind the wheel. Mr. Wilson went hunting for Gatsby, he found him by his poolside and murdered him, then Wilson ended his own life.
Nick felt strangely obligated to organize Gatsby's funeral. Jay was an Oxford man, a self-made millionaire without a real friend in the world. He never took time befriend another, due to his obsession with Daisy. Thus, no one save Gatsby's father showed up. Of all the guests and aquaintances of Jay Gatsby, two were at his funeral and none would inherit his wealth.
"They smashed up things and creatures, and then they reatreated back into their vast carelessness, or their wealth or whatever it was that kept them together." -said of Tom and Daisy, and their wreckless, excess and insecure partnership.