Submitted by francisf0reverr t3_z5im2c in books
Sooo many cringy metaphors and in a lot of areas it's just so weirdđ Some of the characters are interesting to analyse (Daisy mainly but Tom and the Wilsons can be interesting) but overall I find it a pretty basic critique of society. From what I've read about Fitzgerald's life and character he sounds so annoying and seems to project a lot into his work even though he doesn't really have much of anything interesting to say. His other works are also a bit... iffy? (Tender is the Night....?) The film adaptation is much better and makes some very welcome omissions...
Overall not a fan. I have to read it for school so I guess I'll just stick with it. What do you guys thinkđ
ordinary_kittens t1_ixwd13i wrote
Interesting that so many people here donât like the book, which is fair. Personally, I read on my own while I was in university (not as part of a class, was just curious about it) and thoroughly enjoyed the book.
The book is arguably most famous for taking a pessimistic view on the roaring Twenties, during the 1920s. Fitzgerald had trouble with successfully becoming a writer during his own lifetime. But, after the depression and after WWII, people really looked at history and saw the 1920s in America as a kind of cautionary tale of how unchecked optimism and hedonism can lead to disaster. So Fitzgeraldâs take looked a lot smarter in hindsight. Was he really a prophet or was he just a pessimistic alcoholic, bitter that he himself had trouble keeping up with the supposed âhigh societyâ of his day? Probably more the latter than the former, although I still enjoy his observations in the book.
I donât know if the book would mean as much to a non-North American - a lot of the book (at least, in my opinion) has to do with how the main character, and really most of the characters in the book, are people from the west who moved east, only to be overwhelmed and disturbed by how shallow and self-absorbed the lives of the rich and successful were. At this time in the United States, the wealthy of the east would be sort of a new nobility in North America - full of families like the Roosevelts, rich families that had been rich for generations. Out west you would have ânew moneyâ types, people who may have become wealthy through their business endeavours, but they arenât elite the way old money types in New York are elite. So again, you need a hell of a lot of money to fit in with that crowd, but you need more than that, you need old money. Or as Gatsby found, a carefully crafted mystique.
Itâs sort of a âdonât meet your heroesâ story that I can get onboard with. I donât think anyone needs to enjoy it but it always stuck with me.