Essay On The Great Gatsby

2017 Words9 Pages

If you have never read the book “The Great Gatsby” you are truly missing out. This particular book speaks volumes that I could never get through my head until I came across this book. This book brings out the true characters, even when people declare that’s not who they are. In the story “The Great Gatsby” Jay Gatsby lives in West Egg, Long Island. Nick Carraway becomes his neighbor in the story and is also the narrator. Nick was always curious to what Jay was doing, he was always throwing parties in his mansion. He couldn’t help but notice because they were neighbors and the music and people would keep Nick up all night. Later on in the story Nick and Jay become friends. When Nick had came home one night he found Jay standing in the dark …show more content…

When he was 15, his parents sent him to Newman School, and there he met Father Sigourney Fay who took interest in his writing. Father Sigourney pursed him to continue to continue writing and keep improving. When Francis graduated high school, he went to college and shortly after dropped out and joined the Army. Before he had joined the army, he was afraid that he would die and never continue his career in writing. So, he wrote the novel “The Romantic Egotist”, Charles Scribner’s Sons rejected his work but encouraged him to keep writing and continue to submit his …show more content…

Fitzgerald wrote “The Great Gatsby” when sports were popular at the time. There are certain people in the book who are involved in sports, and were known for it in the book. One for example in the book is Jordan Baker, she was a professional golfer. I believe during this time, sports were growing popular but not as much for females as they were for males. Her being in this sport proves that the females were growing to love it just as much as the guys. Another character who was big into sports was Tom Buchanan, Daisy’s husband. Tom was “one of the most powerful ends that ever-played football at New Haven”. Fitzgerald brings sports up a lot in the novel, hinting at what the 1920’s revolved around/or was getting