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Summary Of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby

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After nearly one hundred years since its publication, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is critically acclaimed to be the Great American Novel, with millions of copies being sold annually. Fitzgerald’s pioneering material, brilliant structure, and deconstruction of the highly-sought after American Dream transform the slim novel into a true masterpiece.The story of greed, envy, jealousy, and wealth implores readers to re-read and decipher its deeper-meanings, and serves as a worthy contender for the title of the Great American Novel. Fitzgerald began writing Gatsby novel in his late twenties, pouring his heart and soul into the soon-to-be masterpiece. It was finally published in 1925, after numerous revisions and edits. He expected his new novel to become just as successful as his prior novels; however, he was disappointed to find that his third novel failed to captivate his readers in the ways that they had been accustomed to. This resulted in The Great Gatsby “[failing] to find many readers and glowing reviews” (Hoover). In his lifetime, Fitzgerald saw his book sell twenty thousand copies, and it was not until his death and the beginning of World War II that his third novel finally received the recognition that it deserved. Scott F. Fitzgerald died in 1940, believing his third novel to be a failure. An article suggests that he had received $13.13 in his last royalty check, and “remaindered copies of the second printing of The Great Gatsby were moldering away in

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