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this is the introduction: Men, who base their future objectives on past experiences, will end up destroying their own dreams. In Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby, in his past created an obsessive illusion, a vision of himself and Daisy living in a perfect world, in which lead him to destroy his own life. It is Gatsby's ideals and illusions created by his past that blind him to reality, and to the path of his life.

2007-03-08 14:29:08 · 3 answers · asked by marthapadilla 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

3 answers

Hey, nice intro! I'm assuming by "hook" you mean something that'll grab the reader's attention. Usually I would start by saying something that I think is profound, right off the bat. Then I would explain what I mean by that profound statement and somehow tie that in with the rest of the book. I think you sort of have that here. I had to read this book in high school and I remember my paper started off talking about the American dream and whether it is better for someone to be happy in pursuing their dreams or if they fulfill their dreams and realize that their dreams aren't as perfect as it seemed when one was chasing them. I think I argued for the former. Well, that's just an idea. Good luck with the rest.

2007-03-08 14:36:12 · answer #1 · answered by F1reflyfan 4 · 1 0

In my youthful and greater vulnerable years my father gave 2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae7419002f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae7419002f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900 me some advice that i've got been turning over in my concepts ever since2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900 "whenever you sense like criticizing every physique," he advised me, "purely undergo in concepts that each and all the persons in this international have not had the advantages which you have have been given had2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900" He did not say from now on, yet we've continuously been strangely communicative in a reserved way, and that i understood that he meant a great deal greater advantageous than that2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900In result, i'm susceptible to order all judgments [2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae7419002f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae7419002f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900]... (12f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae7419001-3) theory: The very beginning of the large Gatsby instruments the tone for a e book approximately society and class2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900 all of us be responsive to in the present day that our narrator is privileged, and that he's painfully wakeful of it2f43b42fd833d1e77420a8dae741900 From Shmoop/rates and concepts/Society and class/the large Gatsby

2016-10-17 22:21:59 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

When I read that in English class, I remember talking a lot about how the book related to the American Dream. I think that sounds like a good essay topic. I don't remember what the American Dream was supposed to be exactly, but I remember there were 3 main aspects of it and all of them in some way tied in to the book. I just don't quite remember how...

Next time I buy new books I'm going to get that one to re-read it. :)

2007-03-08 14:34:28 · answer #3 · answered by SheIsDeath 2 · 0 0

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