The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald — book cover

Book details

The Great Gatsby

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

1925 · Penguin

About the book

During the summer of 1922 in Long Island, Nick Carraway observes the extravagant life of Jay Gatsby, a man who hosts massive parties to lure back his former lover, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby has amassed a fortune through bootlegging and shadow deals to reinvent himself and escape his impoverished roots. The narrative follows Gatsby’s desperate attempts to repeat the past, which eventually lead to a fatal hit-and-run accident and a series of violent misunderstandings. Fitzgerald documents the strict social hierarchy that separates old money from the nouveau riche.

Readers interested in the history of the Jazz Age or the social mechanics of class find this book useful for its specific depiction of 1920s American materialism. It serves as a study of how extreme wealth can insulate people from the consequences of their actions. The reader walks away with a clear understanding of the limitations of social mobility and the destructive nature of nostalgia when it is used to anchor an identity.

Details

Published
1925
Publisher
Penguin
ISBN
9780141194059
Language
EN