Originally Posted by
Tyrion Cheddar
Oh, heck no, it's not just you. It's generations of readers. I mentioned recently in a post about Steppenwolf that I was glad I didn't read Gatsby until I was almost fifty, because of the maturity and level of life experience needed to fully understand it.
You mention the love story aspect. What struck me perhaps more than anything else was Fitzgerald's devastatingly accurate portrayal of a man who was literally an empty suit, an invention, all bluster and lies, whose skill was to become the very wishes and hopes each person projected onto him. More to the point, the book points to the human capacity to not only fall for this trick, but embrace it. People love to celebrate affable frauds like Gatsby. Meanwhile, persons of integrity and character too often meet with scorn, particularly when they speak the truth out loud--or because they do.