"You see, but you do not observe." Holmes to Doctor
Watson AN OPTICAL ILLUSION CALLED THE GREAT GATSBY
presumes to "observe" what Fitzgerald meant when in 1924
he excitedly wrote a friend that The Great Gatsby
(published 1925) was "a new thinking out of the idea of
illusion." The precise nature of Fitzgerald's
illusion-making—its technique or léger-de-main, and its
centrality to the novel as a whole—remains more or less
a mystery to this day. Small wonder the author
complained following his novel's appearance that “of all
the reviews, even the most enthusiastic, not one had the
slightest idea what the book was about.” Since the
novel's publication in 1925, readers, in particular
those luckless enough to have been "taught the novel" in
colleges and universities, have been indoctrinated into
believing THE GREAT GATSBY to be little more than an
embodiment of a fantasy (not mentioned anywhere in the
novel, itself) called "The American Dream." The novel
Fitzgerald actually wrote is infinitely more profound,
interesting and universal. GATSBY is most certainly
"Great." A recent list of "top-100-novels" ranked it #1.
Readers and critics alike consider it the major
contender for yet another fantasy or illusion, "The
Great American Novel." And, now girding its loins
against a mindless Hollywood extravaganza bearing its
name, starring some drop-dead cutie named Leonardo
butchering the title role, THE GREAT GATSBY has been
apotheosized into a NEW YORK TIMES best-seller in
fiction. High time to "observe" the drop-dead wonderful
book F.Scott Fitzgerald was putting on the page some
four score and ten years ago.
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