[QUOTE=JBI;645881]That's opinion. Gatsby is actually far more interesting than some give credit. In terms of Prose, both are good examples of the modes of their authors,
and it isn't really a truthful statement to say that "Wuthering Heights is better because of the prose style".
I didn't say that.
For people used to reading in a Victorian mode, of course a Victorian mode would seem better, and seeing as how there are quite a few people who read mostly classics over contemporary books, it would seem likely there are many people who read mostly Victorian novels over modernist ones.
I don't only read Victorian novels, I have mentioned that I like Greene and Maugham, modern writers with a distinctly succint and different style to that of the Brontes.
That being said, if you examine Fitzgerald's prose, you can notice that it is denser than one can imagine. The words themselves seem handpicked and excellent. He is generally regarded as having a quality approach to prose in Gatsby that is of an extremely perfectionist quality, coming from his extensive use of re-drafts throughout the book's composition.
In terms of content - there is more to Gatsby than meets the eyes. There are of course, many layers, as there are with Wuthering Heights. Generally I like to think the book is a short Novella with the weight of a 500 page book. It has far more in it than most books of that length.
For a novel to be so highly acclaimed, it has to have more than form. Content is as, or more important, and to me Gatsby just doesn't have it.
That being said, as to which is better or worse, I think people schooled or more experienced in the British tradition will generally flock to Bronte, simply because she is part of that tradition, whereas people used to American literature, specifically Modernist literature, will probably bend towards Gatsby to some extent. Neither are really "better". I know as many readers who loathe Gatsby as do Wuthering Heights.
Some find Heathcliff to be too Byronic in tone, to the point that they consider the book a flop, as they are unable to sympathize. It's all preference.[/QUOTE]
I have never thought of Heathcliff as Byronic, he's a psychopath. We may be unable to sympathise with him, that's not the point. None of the characters in WH are likeable, as with Gatsby, but they are interesting a trait I do not find in any of the shallow characters in Gatsby. I never cared about any them, or was moved by them. Even though the characters in WH are not sympathetic, the feelings they portray are deep and heartfelt. But as you say, it's personal preference as to which you like, but I can't go along with Gatsby being acclaimed as the great 20th century novel.


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