The Great Gatsby

· Google Play Public Domain · AI-narrated by Mike (from Google)
4.4
461 reviews
Audiobook
4 hr 42 min
Unabridged
Eligible
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About this audiobook

The Great Gatsby is a novel that needs no introduction for a certain generation of American readers. Long taught as required reading in American schools, critics have consistently held it up alongside Moby Dick, Huck Finn, and To Kill a Mockingbird as perhaps the quintessential Great American Novel.

Nick Carraway is a young Midwestern man freshly arrived in New York to make his fortune. He rents a shabby apartment in Long Island next door to a sumptuous mansion: the home of the mysterious and wealthy Jay Gatsby. Carraway spends time catching up with his distant cousin Daisy and her industry-baron husband Tom before being invited to one of Gatsby’s wildly lavish weekend parties. There he meets Jordan, a flapper and a golf star, and an intricate web of romances and betrayals begins to unfold.

The novel is a colorful study of America’s Jazz Age—a term said to be coined by Fitzgerald himself—complete with wealthy socialites living in hedonistic abandon, libertine flappers, jazz bands, roaring roadsters, and greasy speakeasies populated with shady grifters. Contrasted against the glamorous lives of wealthy socialites is the entrenched lower class, who live in gray, dingy squalor among smoldering ash-heaps. Fitzgerald uses the setting to examine the American Dream: the idea that anyone in America can achieve success through hard work and dedication. Gatsby has spent his life reaching for his dream. Some say he’s already achieved it. But has he? Is the dream even real for the hard-working poor that Gatsby and Tom race past in their glittering cars on the way to the decadent city?

Fitzgerald wrote much of his real life into the novel. Like Carraway, he was a Midwesterner educated at an Ivy-league school who went to live on Long Island. Despite his meager finances he hobnobbed with socialites, and spent his career struggling for money to maintain the grand style his romantic interests were accustomed to.

The cover art, titled Celestial Eyes, was commissioned from Francis Cugat, who completed it before the novel was finished. The huge eyes gazing down on the blazing city so moved Fitzgerald that he wrote them into the story.

Fitzgerald saw the novel as a purely artistic work, free of the pulp pandering required by his shorter commissions—but despite that, contemporary reviews were mixed, and it sold poorly. Fitzgerald thought it a failure, and died believing the novel to be fatally obscure. Only during World War II did it come back to the public consciousness, buoyed by the support of a ring of writers and critics and printed as an Armed Service Edition to be sent to soldiers on the front. Now it is an American classic.

This book is part of the Standard Ebooks project, which produces free public domain ebooks.

Ratings and reviews

4.4
461 reviews
Erin Miller
January 26, 2023
When the reader was not quoting individuals, it wasn't too bad. It actually had a decent cadence. But with quoting anybody, one could tell that he was pausing at the ends of sentences without an indicated pause. It was broken and confusing at times to listen to. Plus the flatness with lack of emotion or pitch variation made listening stale. Also, once an audiobook is finished, usually the title of the book and author are given again plus the name of the reader. Instead, the book abruptly completed.
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Amy Lindeman
February 18, 2023
I have always love The Great Gatsby I'm not even 100% sure why but considering I managed to write a 13 page essay in highschool about it that should tell you something! Now with that being said the audiobook was a little underwhelming I was hoping for a little more tone in the readers voice and instead ended up with a robotic ai which usually wouldn't be terrible but there's just something about having a story read with emotion that makes it so much better not sure if that's just me.
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Lisa Om
January 31, 2022
It's a great book if you like this type of read but has way too many fake reviews . It claims to have 102 reviews but I only found 5 and 3 out of those 5 reviews were negative so I doubt they deserve 4.2 stars even with 2 5 star reviews. I give the author 3 stars but this audio book 2 stars for the bland reading technique .
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