Difference between revisions of "The Great Gatsby"
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− | + | {{Book | |
+ | | Title = The Great Gatsby | ||
+ | | SortTitle = Great Gatsby, The | ||
+ | | Image = Great Gatsby, The - Hardcover - USA - 1st Edition.jpg | ||
+ | | ImageDescription = Hardcover - USA - 1st edition. | ||
+ | | Author = {{BookAuthor|F. Scott Fitzgerald}} | ||
+ | | PublishedYear = 1925 | ||
+ | | PublishedMonth = 04 | ||
+ | | PublishedDay = 10 | ||
+ | | Type = {{BookType|Fiction}} | ||
+ | | Genre = {{BookGenre|Romance}} | ||
+ | | Themes = {{MediaTheme|Romance}} | ||
+ | | AgeGroup = Adult | ||
+ | }} | ||
− | '''''The Great Gatsby''''' is a novel written by [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]] and first published on 1925-04-10 | + | '''''The Great Gatsby''''' is a novel written by [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]] and first published on 1925-04-10. |
− | == | + | The story takes place in a fictional region of Long Island, New York, USA during the roaring 20s with prohibition in full swing. The book follows Nick Carraway as he tries to learn more about his an eccentric millionaire neighbor, Jay Gatsby. Gatsby has a mysterious past, throws lavish parties, and has an obsession with a socialite named Daisy Buchanan who is married to another man. |
− | I | + | |
+ | ==Personal== | ||
+ | {{BookStatus | ||
+ | | Own = | ||
+ | | Read = Audiobook read by [[Frank Muller]]. | ||
+ | | Finished = 2019-03-24. | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | I read this book because it's so commonly referred to as a wonderful and important book. I found it to be predicable and uninteresting. | ||
==Review== | ==Review== | ||
+ | {{BookRating|2}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Spoilers}} | ||
+ | |||
===Good=== | ===Good=== | ||
* On more than one occasion Fitzgerald wrote a line that impressed me with the word play. | * On more than one occasion Fitzgerald wrote a line that impressed me with the word play. | ||
Line 12: | Line 37: | ||
===Bad=== | ===Bad=== | ||
* For a fair amount of the book, I was a bit bored. Rich people doing rich things is exciting at first, but it quickly becomes dull. In fact, a lot of the book seems to be about how boring life can be for rich people who have nothing to do but play all day. | * For a fair amount of the book, I was a bit bored. Rich people doing rich things is exciting at first, but it quickly becomes dull. In fact, a lot of the book seems to be about how boring life can be for rich people who have nothing to do but play all day. | ||
− | * The car accident | + | * The car accident is highly contrived. |
− | * Meyer Wolfsheim is | + | * Meyer Wolfsheim is a Jewish stereotype. |
* The ending is a bit anti-climatic. | * The ending is a bit anti-climatic. | ||
===Ugly=== | ===Ugly=== | ||
− | * I never really felt any connection to any of the characters, so I didn't care about any of them. Tom is a racist meathead, Daisy is flighty, neither of them care about each other or their daughter. Jay wastes his ill-gotten fortune on his own fantasies with no consideration for how his whimsical demands affect the people around him. Nick is the only person who isn't horrible, but even he's not that | + | * I never really felt any connection to any of the characters, so I didn't care about any of them. Tom is a racist meathead, Daisy is flighty, neither of them care about each other or their daughter. Jay wastes his ill-gotten fortune on his own fantasies with no consideration for how his whimsical demands affect the people around him. Nick is the only person who isn't horrible, but even he's not that impressive because he spends all of his time helping out horrible people. Basically, the book reminded me of the Mad TV sketch, "Pretty White Kids With Problems." |
+ | |||
+ | ==Media== | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | Honest Book Titles - Great Gatsby, The.jpg|Honest title. | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
{{Link|Wikipedia|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Gatsby}} | {{Link|Wikipedia|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Gatsby}} | ||
{{Link|GoodReads|https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4671.The_Great_Gatsby}} | {{Link|GoodReads|https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4671.The_Great_Gatsby}} | ||
+ | {{Link|TVTropes|https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Literature/TheGreatGatsby}} | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category: Overrated]] |
− | + | [[Category: Books With Unknown Bechdel Test Status]] | |
− | [[Category: Books | + | [[Category: Needs representation]] |
− | [[Category: |
Latest revision as of 16:33, 29 March 2024
The Great Gatsby | ||||||||||||
Hardcover - USA - 1st edition. |
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The Great Gatsby is a novel written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and first published on 1925-04-10.
The story takes place in a fictional region of Long Island, New York, USA during the roaring 20s with prohibition in full swing. The book follows Nick Carraway as he tries to learn more about his an eccentric millionaire neighbor, Jay Gatsby. Gatsby has a mysterious past, throws lavish parties, and has an obsession with a socialite named Daisy Buchanan who is married to another man.
Personal
Own? | No. |
---|---|
Read? | Audiobook read by Frank Muller. |
Finished | 2019-03-24. |
I read this book because it's so commonly referred to as a wonderful and important book. I found it to be predicable and uninteresting.
Review
Overall: |
— This section contains spoilers! —
Good
- On more than one occasion Fitzgerald wrote a line that impressed me with the word play.
Bad
- For a fair amount of the book, I was a bit bored. Rich people doing rich things is exciting at first, but it quickly becomes dull. In fact, a lot of the book seems to be about how boring life can be for rich people who have nothing to do but play all day.
- The car accident is highly contrived.
- Meyer Wolfsheim is a Jewish stereotype.
- The ending is a bit anti-climatic.
Ugly
- I never really felt any connection to any of the characters, so I didn't care about any of them. Tom is a racist meathead, Daisy is flighty, neither of them care about each other or their daughter. Jay wastes his ill-gotten fortune on his own fantasies with no consideration for how his whimsical demands affect the people around him. Nick is the only person who isn't horrible, but even he's not that impressive because he spends all of his time helping out horrible people. Basically, the book reminded me of the Mad TV sketch, "Pretty White Kids With Problems."