Selected Product: no picture available | Great Gatsby (Fiction) Paperback Edition: New Ed Author: F.Scott Fitzgerald Publisher: Addison-Wesley Release Date: 1993-06 ISBN-10: 0582084857 ISBN-13: 9780582084858 List Price: $8.10 Average Customer Rating: | | Atlas Shrugged ISBN-10: 0452011876 ISBN-13: 9780452011878 List Price:$23.00 Animal Farm (Signet Classics) ISBN-10: 0451526341 ISBN-13: 9780451526342 List Price:$9.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Great Gatsby (Fiction) by F.Scott Fitzgerald (ISBN-10: 0582084857, ISBN-13: 9780582084858). At this time we have not yet written a review for Great Gatsby (Fiction) by F.Scott Fitzgerald (ISBN-10: 0582084857, ISBN-13: 9780582084858). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Whoa | Customer Rating: | | This book was very fun to read. I really didn't relate to it at first because I didn't understand the characters; I didn't understand how people could be so childish, but I guess that's what having filthy rich parents does to a person. When I saw the movie I understood better what Fitzgerald tried to get across in the book, even though the movie wasn't that great. Then I read the book again and enjoyed it a lot more. It is very, very good, a perfect representation of what I felt about the life and characters of the '20s. | This book might seem odd, but it is reallly quiet good. | Customer Rating: | | The book "The Great Gatsby" is a portryal of the American dream in its entirety. The book keep the reader motivated with its flowing writing, and it's constant change of action and scenery. The book is comparable with many other great works based upon the fact that Fitzgerald used many symbolisms in the novel that are relevant in todays world. His characters depict both the good and morally corrupt; thereby, making it relevant to all who read it no matter there background our financial status. Although this book never really caught on at when it was first published, it now is winning greater accolades and will remain to be one of America's greatest classics. |
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