 | F. Scott Fitzgerald - Fiction - 2005 - 255 pages
In 'The Great Gatsby', Fitzgerald looks deeply into himself and his milieu to create the story of James Gatz, a self-educated nobody from Kentucky who has amassed a fortune and ... | |
 | Francis Scott Fitzgerald - Fiction - 1996 - 83 pages
A collection of autobiographical essays offers the author's impressions of privileged American life during the 1920s, his rise to fame and subsequent decline, and the attitudes ... | |
 | Morris Dickstein - Literary Criticism - 2009 - 291 pages
Presents critical essays on Fitzgerald's novel about the 1920's, discussing major themes, the Jazz Age, and its early favorable critical reception. | |
 | Matthew Joseph Bruccoli - 2000 - 387 pages
The Great Gatsby is regarded as the most widely taught and read American literary classic. This volume is intended to help readers fully enjoy and understand this work that ... | |
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