Posted on 04/26/2013 1:58:11 PM PDT by Borges
The Great Gatsby has united generations of American readers with its crash-and-burn tale of empty elegance and impossible love on Long Island in the 1920s.
Now the novel is dividing the nations booksellers with dueling paperback editions: the enigmatic blue cover of the original and the movie tie-in book that went on sale Tuesday, a brash, flashy version with Leonardo DiCaprio front and center.
The new edition is timed with the 3-D film adaptation, directed by Baz Luhrmann and starring Mr. DiCaprio, that will arrive in theaters on May 10.
So far this year, sales of the paperback with the original jacket art a glowing cityscape and a pair of floating eyes have been extraordinary. On Thursday, it was the top-selling book on Amazon.com. At Barnes & Noble stores last week, no other paperback book sold more copies. It has landed on best-seller lists for independent bookstores.
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Its just God-awful, Kevin Cassem, a bookseller at McNally Jackson, said on Tuesday. The Great Gatsby is a pillar of American literature, and people dont want it messed with. Were selling the classic cover and have no intention of selling the new one.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
He’s a great writer. But no one reads him for insipid characters like Sonya in Crime and Punishment.
So those comprising the mass market can't find things interesting? Re: "Wholesome and well adjusted people arent interesting"
Art is supposed to disturb
No...art can also inspire, comfort, strengthen, elate, amuse, etc.
It's a myth that art is only supposed to disturb although left-leaning artists tend to think so.
And I guess "depressing" must not fall under the same category as "disturbing" to you? Re: "No great novel is depressing."
“Art is supposed to disturb.”
That’s how those infected with liberalism think. At least Banksy, the serial vandal in London had a nice turn of phrase about it: “Art should comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable.” I much prefer how Boris Pasternak put it in Dr. Zhivago:
“...he made a note reaffirming his belief that art always served beauty, and beauty is delight in form, and form is the key to organizing life, since no living thing can exist without it, so that every work of art, including tragedy, expresses the joy of existence. And his own ideas and notes also brought him joy, a tragic joy, a joy full of tears that exhausted him and made his head ache.”
Conservatives believe art might disturb, but rather should elevate, raise up, inspire, and delight. Art should be about the good, true and the beautiful. That changed in the modern era: http://www.atlassociety.org/why_art_became_ugly
I am sure you did well with GG. There is a lot in there. The language itself is wonderful.
In our OLD American lit text book, that I found in a used book shop and made the kids purchase theirs on line or a dollar per plus shipping, there was a big mug shot of Robert Redford as JG and in a tux. Smiling.
A lovely Mexican girl, paging through saw it and said, “oh (my name) he is Cute!”
I did a montage of you tube clips of him and Paul Newman and I showed them the great homes of Long Island built during the era.
They, in turn, showed me, on you tube, BO saying there were 57 states.
They are so politically incorrect it’s like oxygen.
Brilliant!
I never studied this, just an observation.
I'm not saying that all great 20th century writers are in this camp; I'm just saying that they seem to dominate the field of what is considered "great literature of the 20th century" and what is taught in English lit.
Those sitcoms you listed aren’t Fine Art by any standard. You misunderstand what I meant by ‘disturb’. It’s an aesthetic disturbance. A catharsis - revealing something about yourself or the world that you didn’t know before or that you knew but never quite saw arranged in a beautiful manner. Mozart is disturbing.
Disturb as in cause catharsis. It goes back to the Greeks. See my post just before this one.
Shouldn’t these reviews on books and/or actors be on the “Friday Silliness Thread”? Nobody is an expert on what you enjoy except yourself. I can’t but laugh at the pompous asses that think their opinion is the end all.
Not just you. The book was ridiculous & depressing- & I found it repulsive.
Why this dog (sorry, pooches, no offense meant) keeps being resurrected every decade is beyond me.
Oh, I didn't say they were.
However, you asserted that wholesome people aren't interesting and I gave you just a couple of examples that disprove that assertion.
I think thousands of people have found find Nell, for example, in "The Old Curiosity Shop" or Elinor in "Sense and Sensibility" interesting as well though you state that everyone would find them boring.
Actually no one takes Nell seriously. Remember what Oscar Wilde said...”When one reads of the death of Little Nell, it’s hard not to laugh.”. If those sorts of characters were all there was in Dickens, he would have been forgotten a long time ago.
There are no aesthetic standards? Every opinion is equal? Nonsense.
I don’t think “disturb” is the right word. “Tension” is usually the word used when discussing the build up before catharsis.
Merriam Webster
2
a: purification or purgation of the emotions (as pity and fear) primarily through art
b: a purification or purgation that brings about spiritual renewal or release from tension
Can you amplify that? What better American text from that time do you think it’s unfairly displacing.
Tension can disturb! And even apart from that abstract definition, you can see how an examination of evil in say Dostoevsky would be disturbing in illuminating way.
And who determines which opinion is less equal?
All do not find her or my other example (Elinor) boring as you do. You yourself may not be "disturbed" (using your definition) by wholesome well-adjusted characters but they have satisfied countless others in various forms of art.
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