The Great Gatsby Home Analysis

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The Great Gatsby is a beautiful work of literature wrote by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Through this novel Fitzgerald underlines many works of symbolism, and meaning. The Great Gatsby is a novel about a so called golden girl Daisy, Daisy’s lost love Jay Gatsby, Daisy’s husband Tom Buchannan, Tom’s secret love and Nick Daisy’s cousin. Through the twist plotted novel you truly see the underlying character of each person. Fitzgerald does a wonderful job of symbolizing each character through not only their actions but through their lives they live and the homes they live in. A home is a look into the owner’s soul. Homes truly represent the person that lives and breathes in the home. Throughout the novel we truly see Gatsby’s, George Wilsons, and Tom’s homes and …show more content…

Gatsby is a man of wealth that is extraordinarily known across New York. The catcher is that no one actually knows the true Mr. Gatsby. Gatsby lives in a tremendous, beautiful castle. He puts on a front for the world but he doesn’t do it for the fame or the glory. Gatsby puts on this amazing rich life style for one woman, Daisy Buchanan. He is a truly caring but a self-concessions man that uses money to cover him up and seem equally impressive. The castle is a breath taking and sun catching sight when pictured at the beginning of the novel. When it seems Gatsby is impressing Daisy and all is well with the hidden visitations the castle is seen as a dream. Once the novel crashes into a mess the castle changes and the view of Gatsby changes quiet fast. When the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy is found out and after the death of Myrtle there is a sorrow and a fantasy about the castle. When Gatsby’s home was once a perfect and filled then it turned into an empty cracked fallen soul. Fitzgerald does this to show that Gatsby’s fame was short lived and he truly was not cared about by all the ones that once knew The Great

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