The
Great Gatsby is a story told by Nick Carraway,
who was once Gatsby's neighbor, and he tells the story sometime after 1922, when the incidents that fill the book take place. As the story opens, Nick has just moved from the Midwest to West Egg, Long Island, seeking his fortune as a bond salesman. Shortly after his arrival, Nick travels across the Sound to the more fashionable East Egg to visit his cousin Daisy Buchannan and her husband, Tom, a hulking, imposing man whom Nick had known in college. There he meets professional golfer Jordan Baker. The Buchannans and Jordan Baker live privileged lives, contrasting sharply in sensibility and luxury with Nick's more modest and grounded lifestyle. When Nick returns home that evening, he notices his neighbor, Gatsby, mysteriously standing in the dark and stretching his arms toward the water, and a solitary green light across the Sound.
who was once Gatsby's neighbor, and he tells the story sometime after 1922, when the incidents that fill the book take place. As the story opens, Nick has just moved from the Midwest to West Egg, Long Island, seeking his fortune as a bond salesman. Shortly after his arrival, Nick travels across the Sound to the more fashionable East Egg to visit his cousin Daisy Buchannan and her husband, Tom, a hulking, imposing man whom Nick had known in college. There he meets professional golfer Jordan Baker. The Buchannans and Jordan Baker live privileged lives, contrasting sharply in sensibility and luxury with Nick's more modest and grounded lifestyle. When Nick returns home that evening, he notices his neighbor, Gatsby, mysteriously standing in the dark and stretching his arms toward the water, and a solitary green light across the Sound.
One
day, Nick is invited to accompany Tom, a blatant adulterer, to meet his
mistress, Myrtle Wilson, a middle-class woman whose husband runs a modest
garage and gas station in the valley of ashes, a desolate and run-down section
of town that marks the convergence of the city and the suburbs. After the group
meets and journeys into the city, Myrtle phones friends to come over and they
all spend the afternoon drinking at Myrtle and Tom's apartment. The afternoon
is filled with drunken behavior and ends ominously with Myrtle and Tom fighting
over Daisy, his wife. Drunkenness turns to rage and Tom, in one deft movement,
breaks Myrtle's nose.
Following
the description of this incident, Nick turns his attention to his mysterious
neighbor, who hosts weekly parties for the rich and fashionable. Upon Gatsby's
invitation (which is noteworthy because rarely is anyone ever invited to
Gatsby's parties — they just show up, knowing they will not be turned away),
Nick attends one of the extravagant gatherings. There, he bumps into Jordan
Baker, as well as Gatsby himself. Gatsby, it turns out, is a gracious host, but
yet remains apart from his guest — an observer more than a participant — as if
he is seeking something. As the party winds down, Gatsby takes Jordan aside to
speak privately. Although the reader isn't specifically told what they discuss,
Jordan is greatly amazed by what she's learned.
As
the summer unfolds, Gatsby and Nick become friends and Jordan and Nick begin to
see each other on a regular basis, despite Nick's conviction that she is
notoriously dishonest (which offends his sensibilities because he is "one
of the few honest people" he has ever met). Nick and Gatsby journey into
the city one day and there Nick meets Meyer Wolfshiem, one of Gatsby's
associates and Gatsby's link to organized crime. On that same day, while having
tea with Jordan Baker, Nick learns the amazing story that Gatsby told her the night
of his party. Gatsby, it appears, is in love with Daisy Buchannan. They met
years earlier when he was in the army but could not be together because he did
not yet have the means to support her. In the intervening years, Gatsby made
his fortune, all with the goal of winning Daisy back. He bought his house so
that he would be across the Sound from her and hosted the elaborate parties in
the hopes that she would notice. It has come time for Gatsby to meet Daisy
again, face-to-face, and so, through the intermediary of Jordan Baker, Gatsby
asks Nick to invite Daisy to his little house where Gatsby will show up
unannounced.
The
day of the meeting arrives. Nick's house is perfectly prepared, due largely to
the generosity of the hopeless romantic Gatsby, who wants every detail to be
perfect for his reunion with his lost love. When the former lovers meet, their
reunion is slightly nervous, but shortly, the two are once again comfortable
with each other, leaving Nick to feel an outsider in the warmth the two people
radiate. As the afternoon progresses, the three move the party from Nick's
house to Gatsby's, where he takes special delight in showing Daisy his
meticulously decorated house and his impressive array of belongings, as if
demonstrating in a very tangible way just how far out of poverty he has
traveled.
At
this point, Nick again lapses into memory, relating the story of Jay Gatsby.
Born James Gatz to "shiftless and unsuccessful farm people," Gatsby
changed his name at seventeen, about the same time he met Dan Cody. Cody would
become Gatsby's mentor, taking him on in "a vague personal capacity"
for five years as he went three times around the Continent. By the time of
Cody's death, Gatsby had grown into manhood and had defined the man he would become.
Never again would he acknowledge his meager past; from that point on, armed
with a fabricated family history, he was Jay Gatsby, entrepreneur.
Moving
back to the present, we discover that Daisy and Tom will attend one of Gatsby's
parties. Tom, of course, spends his time chasing women, while Daisy and Gatsby
sneak over to Nick's yard for a moment's privacy while Nick, accomplice in the
affair, keeps guard. After the Buchannans leave, Gatsby tells Nick of his
secret desire: to recapture the past. Gatsby, the idealistic dreamer, firmly
believes the past can be recaptured in its entirety. Gatsby then goes on to
tell what it is about his past with Daisy that has made such an impact on him.
As
the summer unfolds, Gatsby and Daisy's affair begins to grow and they see each
other regularly. On one fateful day, the hottest and most unbearable of the
summer, Gatsby and Nick journey to East Egg to have lunch with the Buchannans
and Jordan Baker. Oppressed by the heat, Daisy suggests they take solace in a
trip to the city. No longer hiding her love for Gatsby, Daisy pays him special
attention and Tom deftly picks up on what's going on. As the party prepares to
leave for the city, Tom fetches a bottle of whisky. Tom, Nick, and Jordan drive
in Gatsby's car, while Gatsby and Daisy drive Tom's coupe. Low on gas, Tom
stops Gatsby's car at Wilson's gas station, where he sees that Wilson is not
well. Like Tom, who has just learned of Daisy's affair, Wilson has just learned
of Myrtle's secret life — although he does not know who the man is — and it has
made him physically sick. Wilson announces his plans to take Myrtle out West,
much to Tom's dismay. Tom has lost a wife and a mistress all in a matter of an
hour. Absorbed in his own fears, Tom hastily drives into the city.
The
group ends up at the Plaza hotel, where they continue drinking, moving the day
closer and closer to its tragic end. Tom, always a hot-head, begins to badger
Gatsby, questioning him as to his intentions with Daisy. Decidedly tactless and
confrontational, Tom keeps harping on Gatsby until the truth comes out: Gatsby
wants Daisy to admit she's never loved Tom but that, instead, she has always
loved him. When Daisy is unable to do this, Gatsby declares that Daisy is going
to leave Tom. Tom, though, understands Daisy far better than Gatsby does and
knows she won't leave him: His wealth and power, matured through generations of
privilege, will triumph over Gatsby's newly found wealth. In a gesture of
authority, Tom orders Daisy and Gatsby to head home in Gatsby's car. Tom, Nick,
and Jordan follow.
As
Tom's car nears Wilson's garage, they can all see that some sort of accident
has occurred. Pulling over to investigate, they learn that Myrtle Wilson, Tom's
mistress, has been hit and killed by a passing car that never bothered to stop,
and it appears to have been Gatsby's car. Tom, Jordan, and Nick continue home
to East Egg. Nick, now disgusted by the morality and behavior of the people
with whom he has been on friendly terms, meets Gatsby outside of the Buchannans
house where he is keeping watch for Daisy. With a few well-chosen questions,
Nick learns that Daisy, not Gatsby, was driving the car, although Gatsby
confesses he will take all the blame. Nick, greatly agitated by all that he has
experienced during the day, continues home, but an overarching feeling of dread
haunts him.
Nearing
dawn the next morning, Nick goes to Gatsby's house. While the two men turn the
house upside down looking for cigarettes, Gatsby tells Nick more about how he
became the man he is and how Daisy figured into his life. Later that morning,
while at work, Nick is unable to concentrate. He receives a phone call from
Jordan Baker, but is quick to end the discussion — and thereby the friendship.
He plans to take an early train home and check on Gatsby.
The
action then switches back to Wilson who, distraught over his wife's death,
sneaks out and goes looking for the driver who killed Myrtle. Nick retraces
Wilson's journey, which placed him, by early afternoon, at Gatsby's house.
Wilson murders Gatsby and then turns the gun on himself.
After
Gatsby's death, Nick is left to help make arrangements for his burial. What is
most perplexing, though, is that no one seems overly concerned with Gatsby's
death. Daisy and Tom mysteriously leave on a trip and all the people who so
eagerly attended his parties, drinking his liquor and eating his food, refuse
to become involved. Even Meyer Wolfshiem, Gatsby's business partner, refuses to
publicly mourn his friend's death. A telegram from Henry C. Gatz, Gatsby's father,
indicates he will be coming from Minnesota to bury his son. Gatsby's funeral
boasts only Nick, Henry Gatz, a few servants, the postman, and the minister at
the graveside. Despite all his popularity during his lifetime, in his death,
Gatsby is completely forgotten.
Nick,
completely disillusioned with what he has experienced in the East, prepares to
head back to the Midwest. Before leaving, he sees Tom Buchannan one last time.
When Tom notices him and questions him as to why he didn't want to shake hands,
Nick curtly offers "You know what I think of you." Their discussion
reveals that Tom was the impetus behind Gatsby's death. When Wilson came to his
house, he told Wilson that Gatsby owned the car that killed Myrtle. In Tom's
mind, he had helped justice along. Nick, disgusted by the carelessness and
cruel nature of Tom, Daisy, and those like them, leaves Tom, proud of his own
integrity.
On
the last night before leaving, Nick goes to Gatsby's mansion, then to the shore
where Gatsby once stood, arms outstretched toward the green light. The novel
ends prophetically, with Nick noting how we are all a little like Gatsby, boats
moving up a river, going forward but continually feeling the pull of the past.
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