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  1. There's a lot stuffed into that paragraph, so let's unpack it: first, the owl-eyed man is surprised (and a little delighted) to find out that the books are real. So, Gatsby's done his due diligence in trying to fool people: he's actually gone out and purchased real books. But, as the man discovers, he hasn't cut the pages and actually read them.

  2. We've got a list of the main characters in The Great Gatsby right here, and we promise we'll stay mum on Hollywood's casting decisions until you've decided for yourself. Nick Carraway. (Click the character infographic to download.)Okay, Gatsby's name is the one in the title—but we still think that Nick is the major player.

  3. Shmoop breaks down key quotations from The Great Gatsby. We love it when quotes help us encapsulate the major ideas, events, and personalities within a story. You can use these quotes as evidence when you write an essay. For example, to prove Nick Carraway was super jealous of Jay Gatsby, you've got to pinpoint the moments in the text when he's ...

  4. We (and Nick) are soon fascinated by a certain Mr. Jay Gatsby, a wealthy and mysterious man who owns a huge mansion next door to Nick and spends a good chunk of his evenings standing on his lawn and looking at an equally mysterious green light across the bay. Ookay. Tom takes Nick to the city to show off his mistress, a woman named Myrtle ...

  5. The Great Gatsby Theme of Wealth. Back. More. (Click the themes infographic to download.) In The Great Gatsby, money makes the world go 'round —or at least gets you moving in the right direction. It can buy you yellow Rolls-Royces, "gas blue" dresses, and really nice shirts, but in the end it can't buy you happiness. Or class.

  6. After "Winter Dreams" first appeared in Metropolitan magazine in September of 1922, Fitzgerald reworked both the overall plot of the story and some of its passages into his most famous novel, The Great Gatsby (1925). Yeah, that's right: this little ol' story became one of the most important books in the history of American literature.

  7. Character Role Analysis Jordan Baker and Daisy Buchanan. Jordan and Daisy may both be golden girls, but Daisy is traditional where Jordan is modern. Tom and Gatsby see Daisy as an angel, something to be protected and put on a pedestal; Jordan Baker would cut off her "golden arm" (3.19) before she'd let anyone do that to her.

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