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Life, Like The Great Gatsby

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Term Paper TitleLife, Like The Great Gatsby
# of Words1736
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)6.94
Life, like The great Gatsby

        Imagine that you live in the nineteen twenties, and that you are a very wealthy man
that lives by himself in a manchine, on a lake and who throws parties every weekend.  This
is just the beginning of  how to explain the way Jay Gatsby lived his life.  This novel, by F.
Scott, Fitzgerald  is one that is very deep in thought.  Fitzgerald releases little clues along
the way of the novel  that will be crusual to understand the ending.  For instance, he
makes the blue coupe a very important clue, as well as the Dr. T. J. Eckleburg eyes on the
billboard that Mr. Wilson (the gas station attendant ) refers to as the eyes of god.  There
are also other little things that relate to the reason of  gatsby's death.  The main
character's of this novel each have their part to do with the ending, Nick Caraway is
probably the main character of this novel, as he comes down from New Jersey to new
York to visit his cousin Daisy, who is married to Tom Buchannan.  These are some of the
incidents that are included in the novel as  you will read further I will relate some issues of
the novel, as well as other critics have included their views on The Great Gatsby.
        F. Scott, Fitsgerald  was an American short story writer and novelist famous for
his depictions of the Jazz Age(the 1920's), his most brilliant novel work being The Great
Gatsby(1925). He was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on sept. 24, 1896  and died in
Hollywood, California on December 21, 1940.  His private life, with his wife, Zelda, in
both America and France, became almost as celebrated as his novels.  Fitsgerald was the
only son of an aristocrat father, who was the author of the star spangle banner.  Fitzgerald
spent most of time with his wife, latter in their relationship they moved to france where he
began to write his most brilliant novel, The Great Gatsby.  All of his divided nature is in
this novel, the native midwestener afir with the possibilities of  every Americans dream in                                                                                                              
                                                                         OLSON 2
it's hero, Jay Gatsby, and the compassionate princeton gentlemen in it's narrator, Nick
Carraway.  The Great Gatsby is the most profoundly American novel of it's time
(Houghton).  Fitzgerald had an intensely romantic imagination, what he once called "a
heightened sensitivity to the promises of life," and he ...

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