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compared to Fitzgerald, any study of Ernest Hemingway’s short stories must begin with a discussion of style. Reacting against the overblown, rhetorical, and often bombastic narrative techniques of his predecessors, Hemingway spent considera...
themes of Fitzgerald’s books draw from from the resolution of stress when one idea (usually embodied in a character) triumphs over another. Amory Blaine, the protagonist of Fitzgerald’s first novel, This Side of Paradise, is a questing cha...
then, but that's no issue tomorrow we will run much quicker, extend out our arms farther. Within The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald values both imagery and dialogue to enhance both the individual characteristics and the backgrounds in alignment t...
The novel draws several extensive parallels between the real life of the author and the story it contains. The resemblances vary from basing characters of important individuals from his private life to incorporating complicated love associa...
Journal entry on the great gatsby Jay Gatsby makes himself look like an innocent rich man who inherited his wealth from diseased family members. Jay’s desire for wealth shines through when Tom describes Jay as a bootlegger. The phrase “He’s...
Paradise, when man placed. The book then talks about the first cause of the fall of man, the serpent; or rather, Satan in the serpent, who, rebelling against God and drawing on his side many legions of angels, was, by the command God, cast ...
Paradise Lost emphasize this point, telling how “Man’s first disobedience” brought “death into the world and all our humanity’s woe”. The aim of the author was to demonstrate how Paradise Lost, while being a poem primarily telling of humani...