Great Gatsby Analysis

Improved Essays
According to the article " 'Gatsby ' Author Fitzgerald Rests In A D.C. Suburb” (2012), “Fitzgerald was the writer who defines the Jazz Age, with stories of carefree youth, flappers and millionaires. He became an emblem of the era, living out many of its excesses.” Fitzgerald wrote many famous stories that are still admired today. Some of these were praised so much that they have been turned into movies; however, what most people don’t know is that some of these books/movies were written based on his life. Many people admire Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald for his popular works, but they do not know about his life or the obstacles he went through.
The article “Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald” (1998) found in Encyclopedia of World Biography states that Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on September 24, 1896 to an Irish Catholic, wealthy couple. According to Dictionary of American Biography in the article “Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald” (1944), he was the third born out of four children, but was the only boy. Sadly, two of his siblings died before he was born. Growing up his family moved according to his father’s job; however, Fitzgerald always attended private schools.
When it came time for college, he studied at Princeton University
…show more content…
This novel was different than his first two; it is about Jay Gatsby who throws lavish parties waiting for his lost long lover Daisy Buchanan. The story uses Nick Carraway to educate the reader about Jay’s past by having Nick become friends with Jay. Gatsby is constantly trying to win back Daisy while she is married to Tom Buchanan, who is cheating on Daisy. At the end Gatsby is murdered and Tom and Daisy move away together. The story was critiqued, and it was said that from this book one could tell Fitzgerald was going to be a writer. The Great Gatsby was the book that really set off his career (American

Related Documents

  • Superior Essays

    He narrates the new adventures that he goes on with the mysterious neighbor Jay Gatsby. It also chronicles Nick and Jay 's strange relationship and Gatsby 's attempts to regain the love of Daisy, who Gatsby once dated and never stopped loving. Daisy 's husband looks into Gatsby 's past and uncovers that he is really a bootlegger and eventually Gatsby 's death. Even though critics of his day and age loved The Great Gatsby, it wasn 't until the 1950 's-1960 's that it achieved stature as one of the greatest novels ever written, but by then Fitzgerald had already…

    • 1579 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Elizabeth has some choice things to say to him, and the next day he hands her a letter with the full story about Wickham (he's a liar, a gambler, and he tried to elope with Darcy's underage sister) and Jane (Darcy was convinced Jane was just a gold-digger). Cue emotional transformation. (Click the infographic to…

    • 905 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Gatsby is so in love with her that he is willing to take on a murder for her. Gatsby believes that romance belongs to the present but to a past transfigured by imagined memory and to the illusory (Ornstein). Gatsby is desperately trying to recreate the past when Daisy was his and they didn’t even know who Tom Buchanan was. Daisy realizes this and…

    • 1389 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Through a series of events, Gatsby and Daisy reconnect and Daisy wants to leave Tom for Gatsby. However, Gatsby gets angry when Daisy says that she loves him too, implying that Daisy loves both Tom and Gatsby, since Daisy is Gatsby’s only love and Gatsby wants Daisy to feel the same way. Gatsby lets Daisy drive home from this encounter, and in her state of anxiety, anger, and panic she hits and kills Tom’s mistress, Myrtle Wilson. Because Gatsby’s car hit Myrtle, rumors start to spread that he killed her, causing Tom to seek revenge against Gatsby. Tom convinces Myrtle’s husband to seek out and kill Gatsby, while Gatsby anxiously waits for Daisy to call him for the first time since their awkward split.…

    • 1291 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    When he wins his little clash of wills with Gatsby, he drives the figurative blade in only a tad bit more when he demands that Daisy drive home with Gatsby. I think he understands that his arrogant little tease is over. He acts inconsiderate towards his own wife. He doesn 't even care that she is driving back home with the man who attempted to take his ladies. In the story Tom is portrayed, "He had changed since his new safe house years.…

    • 1014 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Further, less straightforward examples of this are found in Daisy and Tom’s infidelities. Daisy, who always dreamed of the perfect husband, cheats on her husband when the opportunity presents itself, as does Tom. Anecdotally, almost every character in The Great Gatsby turns to alcohol to escape a life they view as mundane. The 1920’s in America are notorious for being a time of excess materialism and temporary highs. Nick puts this eloquently when he states that he is no longer interested in what he describes as the, “abortive sorrows and shortwinded elations of men.”(Fitzgerald 2).…

    • 1080 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Great Gatsby Response

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The American Dream The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, has an abundance of symbolism, growth, and dreams. Deep within the story is a meaning of pure gratitude that grounds the depth of strength and recovery through a sense of fight and difficulty. However, it represents this idea by the caption of a lifestyle filled with wealth and power within the lives of many born into such a lifestyle with the acceptance of one individual. Each of the characters seems to be seeking a better future or a more fulfilled outline of their life because all is never completely satisfied. Each of the obstacles faced tend to be highly symbolic to the book itself because of its entire experience of riveting details and irony.…

    • 1026 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    "He had everything a man could want--power, grace and style" - Simon and Garfunkel. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is one of the most classic novels in American Literature, so it is obvious that many new readers would assume that the novel's main focus is on American society in the 1920s. There’s wild thinking in what is not expected however, the ugly truth behind the main character, Jay Gatsby. Gatsby pursued something that had meaning, leaving his life void of just that. Gatsby's unexplained wealth and social status, his brief and spiraling relationship with Daisy Buchanan and his dreary death breaks the illusion, conveying that Jay Gatsby is opposite to what the title says, he is not "Great" after all.…

    • 1278 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There he finally gets to meet the one and only Mr. Gatsby. Days after that meeting, Nick learns that Jay was in a relationship with Daisy and was still in love with her and asks him to arrange a meeting with her at his house. After the awaited meeting, Gatsby and Daisy start an affair. Days later, the lovers decide to tell Tom that Daisy was going to leave him and be with Gatsby. At the last moment, Daisy changed her mind and a fight broke amongst Tom and Jay.…

    • 808 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Texas Family History

    • 1022 Words
    • 5 Pages

    My branch on the White Family tree started on December 29, 1953 on the day of my birth to my loving parents Daniel and Bessie White of Warren Texas. Daniel and Bessie raised eight children in a three-bedroom home were we all lived happy and healthy. My sisters and brothers attended Red Oak Elementary; in 1964 after Red Oak, we attended an integrated school. As for myself, I attended an all white middle school. In the beginning, my time there was very difficult.…

    • 1022 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays