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The book by F. Scott Fitzgerald is the subject of exhibitions in New York, Minnesota, New Jersey and South Carolina.
“The Great Gatsby” is important, of course, but it’s also all kinds of fun.
Each Noveltease production takes a literary work from the public domain and breathes life into them with rhinestones, gender play and grit. Some of the titles they’ve adapted include “Frankenstein,” ...
In 1951, a blind 65-year-old man named Max Gerlach was listening to the radio when something jolted him to attention. A guest ...
Leonardo DiCaprio starred in a 2013 cinematic interpretation of The Great Gatsby, which author Jane Crowther has reimagined ...
Fitzgerald’s tonally pessimistic second novel was again shaped by his own experiences, drawing ... at work on The Great Gatsby. In July 1922, he declared: “I want to write something new – something ...
Great works of art are great, in part, because they continue to have something to say to the present: They're both timebound and timeless. And,... 100 years later, 'The Great Gatsby' still speaks ...
The Great Gatsby — 100 years old? How can that be? To borrow the words F. Scott Fitzgerald used to describe New York City in the 1920s, The Great Gatsby possesses "all the iridescence of the ...
The Great Gatsby — 100 years old? How can that be? To borrow the words F. Scott Fitzgerald used to describe New York City in the 1920s, The Great Gatsby possesses "all the iridescence of the beginning ...