Every time I read the Great Gatsby I get frustrated. I mean it’s full of metaphor, shady characters, and cause and affect that some times really make you wonder who these people really are. While I am reading it I feel like I am doing a chore but after word I reflect on it.
Yes reading the book is a task in itself but as Alyssa and
Devon pointed out to me in previous comments these people are actually like some real life people.
There are people out there who fall in love with a woman and try to raise their status to extremes just to win their love back. There are also men who don’t appreciate or care about their wives until other men covet them. There is always that naïve neutral character in life that you always just want to say, listen you are stupid for believing everything you hear. Then there is that bazaar self centered gossiping fool of a girl who no one ever trusts or can take seriously. So I applaud Fitzgerald for making his characters seem like real people.
Lastly the other thing I would like to explain is something that I said in class because I do not think I was understood due to the fact that I am terrified to speak in public and I stumble on what I am trying to get across.
I was taught the first time around that
Wilson was the only character in the book that was really putting in 110%. He married his wife. Even though he was poor he still loved her. He tried to support her as best as he could.
Wilson worked every day in the garage trying to earn money to give Myrtle a better life which is what the American Dream really is. It’s the chance to improve your status and standing in life in terms of society and wealth. Myrtle harmed the American Dream by going out with Tom and slapped the American opportunity [dream] in the face. Because of this she was killed. This does make sense to me. I hope it makes more sense to everyone else now. I didn’t know that how I explained it in class was so out there.