Why is it widely regarded as one of the best novels of the past century? I mean, the last 2 chapters are fine, but the rest of the book is just dull.
Also, I haven't read anything else by Fitzgerald, so I can't say anything deeper about his work other than this book.
And I think it sucked.
Aaron Richardson
>Hey guys, this classic work of objectively brilliant literature that has shaped thought for decades is terrible
>I should know, I'm like super clever and stuff. It's trash. Everyone has been wrong about this book the whole time.
>this isn't a bait thread I swear
Kayden Williams
Simple yet descriptive writing used to tell a story with a powerful life lesson. What's not to like?
Kayden Roberts
>Why Because Americans needed something short and easy to canonize and teach, and because of this good old sheepish behavior you have a perfect example of right here
Kayden Hernandez
>Hey guys, I can't accept that fact that people have different opinions from myself because I'm a betafaggot.
Michael Sullivan
I completely agree user.
John Adams
Modern bullshit. No wonder Scott Fitzgerald is a member of the "lost generation".
James Green
Because it's simple but with enough pretence depth so plebs feel good about "getting it". Fitzgerald was a slightly better John Green of his generation.
Bentley Morgan
kek
Nathan Turner
>objectively brilliant
go on, defend how The Great Gatsby is objectively brilliant.
Ian Price
My HS teacher said it's good!
Ryder Lee
the book is deceptively simple. it really does fool stupid people into thinking it's really plain. that's what I love about it.
Leo Jackson
This guy's got it.
Eli Turner
probably the same guy
Juan Watson
>perfect prose >prescient themes >Fitzgerald never fell for the maximalism meme
It's a hat trick
Brayden Howard
plain autism
Cooper Sanders
Agreed. Also, Tom is one of the most superficial characters ever written.
Jaxon Parker
Is it simple? I had to read a lot of paragraphs twice and have a dictionary next to me desu. This was the summer going into university though before I had more reading experience. Perhaps I should read it again.
Dylan Cox
Did you really have to read it with a dictionary by your side?
Cameron Hughes
The book has beautiful prose. What other books are like it? Someone mentioned Fitz's other books but I can't remember which was the better one
Camden Collins
cuck
John Morgan
I can't really think of a book with tighter prose. The book is wonderfully nationalistic but deals with deceptivly simple universal themes, the characters are gripping, memorable, and complex, and, above all, it's just really pretty in a Flaubertian way that's more rapturous than sublime. Not too mention it's a book you can interpret with a myriad of critical lenses and have every interpretation seem "right," as if old Fitzy was clever enough to pack in so much subtext. Not many novels can do that in under 200 pages (assuming you're using the Scribener).
Alexander Cooper
Tom isn't complex at all. Neither is Jordan, nor Myrtle. They're pretty superficial, user. Also, what universal themes?
Ryder Parker
REMINDER THAT TOM DID NOTHING WRONG
Jordan Edwards
Try Winter Dreams. It's a short-story that's basically the proto-Gatsby
Ian Cruz
Say Nick, have you ever read a book called "The Rise of the Colored Empires" by this man Goddard?
Ian Rogers
Bae across the Bay is the meaning of suffering
Lincoln Lopez
A book of genius written by a mediocre writer.
Thinking Gatsby, Hemingway, Salinger = pleb is a tryhard phase you'll grow out of on the road to true patriciandom.
Christopher Harris
Thinking in terms of trying-hard and patriciandom is something you'll, ... well, probably not.
Ryan Russell
It's Firzgerald's shortest, best, most focused work. Fitzgerald was a fairly popular writer already. This book is also one of the best artifacts of the Jazz Age
I mean, it's popular for lots of reasons. If you didn't like it, literally nobody cares, because every book is worthy of somebody liking or not liking it. You're not breaking new ground by shitting on the Great Gatsby. There are thousands of high school kids just like you who don't appreciate it for whatever reason. Maybe some day you will. Maybe not. It literally doesn't matter
Juan Miller
>dictionary not literally but there were a few words I remember having to look up. It isn't an easy read for the average high school student.
Evan Adams
I think the thing about this book is that it's easily taught and easily learned. It IS a good book, but it might not hit as hard if you skipped it when you started getting into literature and read a ton of varied and complicated stuff before.
You should try reading it again in five years.
Charles Scott
You think so? Maybe it's just a case of, due to being written a while ago, some of the words have fallen out of common-use.
Landon Lopez
I'll consider that. Thank you, user.
Noah Hughes
Tender is the Night is his best work
Carter Harris
I think so as well. I had to reread TITN when I was in college and it is so much better than Gatsby.
Chase Gutierrez
>TITN
Anthony Hall
I thought it was garbage. Stupid little bourgeois ditty about horny white people on vacation. Then one of them became an alcoholic. Wow. Can't stand Evelyn Waugh for the same reason.
Eli Sullivan
>average high school student
Next time just lead off with letting us all know you are retarded so we don't waste our time.
Ethan Cooper
Everyone who reads GG and doesn't think it is the best piece of modern anglo literature is like Hitler to me.
Ethan Flores
underrated post
Jack Martinez
>Durr murrcan meme Adorable.
Easton Reed
It's pure truth, user.
Joseph Johnson
The ending was embarrasing.
Michael Diaz
It seems absurd to say this given how culturally specific it is, but that sort of book would never have been given consideration in any other context, and especially not in a country secure in having a greater literary tradition.
William Nelson
I agree, except for the last two chapters being good. I can't understand why this is considered a classic let alone "the great American novel".