Next to hard work, one must fulfill their life. The American Dream is to have everything ever wanted and be happy with this. Tom and Gatsby both struggle with the lack of having this fulfilled life despite the mounds of cash they both hold. The two different parties in East and West Egg show this issue in different manors. Gatsby and Tom use their money to woo girls. East Egg is the more polished of the two Eggs, therefore they hold more private and intimate parties. East Egg is also the home of
size” (9). The Great Gatsby, written by Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, presents Fitzgerald’s life through a variety of different characters in this American classic. In this novel the main protagonist, Jay Gatsby, sets out to win the heart of a love long lost. He enlists the help of Nick Carraway, a gentleman who almost became corrupt by the Northeast, to help him win the heart of Daisy. The three main locations in this novel reflect the people that live there and each symbolize a class in American
ourselves, that we are underlings.” This quote inspired John Green to write the 2012 novel The Fault in Our Stars, which contains many other underlying messages. Green states, “The truth is that metaphor and symbol are all around us, and that we are constantly reading our lives and the world symbolically. I want figurative language and symbols to be as deeply integrated into the story as they are into our lives” (Sparknote). That’s exactly what he did in writing this number one fiction book of the year
Fitzgerald, in writing The Great Gatsby, depicts to the readers how the American dream is romantic and beautiful, yet deeply flawed and contradictory, through the usage of rhetorical and literary devices, such as oxymorons and hyperboles.
A Bridge too Great: The difference between Gatsby and I Jay Gatsby, dissatisfied with his life in North Dakota, uproots himself on the quest for a new identity. He believes that money will bring him happiness: “Each night he added to the patterns of his fantasies until drowsiness closed down upon some vivid scene with an oblivious embrace” (Fitzgerald 45). Every night, while he was still James Gatz, he fantasized over one day being part of the upper class. Fitzgerald utilizes him to exemplify