"The Great Gatsby", is one of many great novels written by a lost generation "author. It exhibits the insanity and non-traditional qualities of the Jazz-Age" as Fitzgerald, the author, coined the rambunctious times of the Twenties. This narrative, which reminds so many of their own hopes and dreams, uses a story of lavish characters being analyzed by a war-hardened, middle-class man named Nick Carraway to portray the American Dream. The insanity, which is narrated by Mr. Carraway, is illustrated by the Buchanan's, Daisy and Tom, and by Mr. Jay Gatsby himself. And when reality finally shows the upper echelon of New York City what is really happening, people die, marriages are strained, and the enthusiastic carousing of the weekends will turn into the exasperation of actuality.
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As a revolutionary author, F. Scott Fitzgerald creates the character of Nick, with his drab, mid-western and World War I experiences, and puts him in the center of a neighborhood which holds the most extravagant lie that has ever quite possibly been imagined. Nick, a humble bonds clerk begins this upside-down chapter of his life meeting his cousin for dinner. I myself have always imagined a bonds-clerk as a sickly, unhappy man with a family and no time for parties. But Nick is the polar opposite in that he is a healthy thirty year old bachelor and he has time for plenty of partying. His cousin is Daisy Buchanan, wife of Tom Buchanan, a powerfully built wealthy man who cannot keep himself from dating other women while he is married. These are my least favorite characters because they remind me of the aristocratic oligarchy of the Roman government in the years leading up to the installment of a Caesar. .
It is while visiting one of Tom's mistresses that Nick encounters what occurs when wealth meets the middle-class at a party. To put it simply, the meeting ends with a broken nose, a disgruntled photographer, and Nick's disillusionment with attending wild parties.