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Kevin LaTorre's avatar

Solid as ever! One thing I wondered about from your characterization: absolutely, the 1920s were worth our "profound disgust," but what to make of the sense of mourning present in the novel? It's certainly there in the last line ("born back ceaselessly into the past"), and also in the sense of illusory memories that you reference. The Jazz Age was abhorrent in many respects, but Fitzgerald colors it all with a grief for what was lost in it. This sense of elegy is present in his other earlier novels as well, which makes me think that it needs more attention.

Could it be that the novel mourns that profound wastefulness you mentioned? Gatsby, possessing divine hope and superhuman loyalty, can only apply them to his own fantasy. That seems to illustrate the entire deflation of the Jazz Age, where there was so much promise for peace after WWI but also a profound squandering.

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Ivan Webster's avatar

I share your admiration for this fine novel. Also, your description of the effectiveness of Fitzgerald's prose is excellent. But I think you're unfair to Nick in suggesting that he's as decadent and adrift as those he's describing. He tells us that once he returned to the Midwest after that shattering summer with Gatsby, and witnessing the Buchanans at their most deceitful, he wanted to the world to be "at a sort of moral attention."

He's discovered that we need to remain morally alert all the time, fail though we sometimes inevitably do. But he's in the novel to bear witness to that principle, to enact it. Is Ishamel complicit in Ahab's mad pursuit of the whale? No, he's our witness to Ahab's loss of moral balance. Nick plays a similar role in "Gatsby". He's not one of the story's depraved. He's our only lifeline to not becoming one of them.

Also, I've just subscribed to your newsletter. It looks as though I have some interesting reading to catch up on. Best regards.

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