Fitzgerald, in the novel of The Great Gatsby, is trying to tell the readers that all men are the same rich, or not. In the novel, Nick introduces Tom Buchanan to us as the rich guy with a beautiful family and a great life. Then, he introduces George Wilson as the poor guy with a wife who does not want him and is not living the best life. Two different men with two different classes, lives, and upbringings. Even though they are two different men with completely different everything, if you strip them of it all, you will see that both men are alike even with all their differences. The end the novel shows us that all men are the same and all women are the same. Each time the novel introduces Tom Buchanan or George Wilson to the readers it describes …show more content…
He is also telling us how very similar Tom Buchanan and George Wilson are even if they have different backgrounds, lives, and upbringings. What Fitzgerald did not tell the readers is that their differences made them more alike in a lot of different ways and their differences also made the novel more symbolic. Even though George Wilson is not mentioned much throughout the novel as much as Tom Buchanan is, readers can still compare and contrast their actions and personalities very well and put the two together and also readers can tell that George Wilson is still a big part in the novel, regardless. Fitzgerald, though did not tell us any or very many similarities he did give us a few contact clues to get to them. Most readers do not think that the two have much in common but after reading into the details more all the clues there were Fitzgerald trying to tell the readers a lot more. In the end the readers could definitely tell a few more similarities about Tom Buchanan and George Wilson, similarities like how both men were mean, cowards, and unhappy men with cold hearts. “No amount of of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart.” This quote from the novel best describes both