The Great Gatsby

Hardcover

English language

Published Aug. 9, 1934 by Modern Library.

OCLC Number:
15374740

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (1 review)

The Great Gatsby is a story of the fabulous 1920s that incredible period in American history that ended in a crash from which we are all reeling still. The editors of Time Magazine report that Gatsby was the "first racketeer in United States fiction." Countless novels and motion pictures have followed the pattern since, but The Great Gatsby remains the most brillian and understanding prtrait of the first mad days of the bootleg era. It is by all odds Scot Fitzgerald's best book, and one that nobody interested in the development of American literabure can afford to overlook. (front flap)

80 editions

reviewed The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Everyman's Library Classics)

Gatsby might be 'great' but the book he's in is not.

3 stars

I freely admit that what finally got me to read this after so long was an article in The New York Times where it is described as a 'quick read' at barely 200 pages and possible to get through in an afternoon. I did not use an entire afternoon, but had a few evenings and therefore found myself reading about Jay Gatsby for the first time at the centenary of his emergence.

My first thought was that the book is quite funnier than I'd imagined. Fitzgerald loves to throw in lines for Nick Carraway that capture the silliness that surrounds him. This made the book a far more amusing read than I had anticipated and helped keep my interest throughout.

As a story, The Great Gatsby is terribly straightforward. There's little in the way of ingenuity per se, and it is the characters, their setting, the culture that surrounds them, …