A
B
C
D
E
100

What is the name of the author of our book?

F. _______  ________

F. Scott Fitzgerald

100

What does Tom give Daisy on their wedding day?

A pearl necklace

100

What was Gatsby’s real name?

James Gatz

100

What colour is Gatsby's car?

Yellow

100

How many pages is our copy of The Great Gatsby (excluding introduction, notes, etc.)?

180

200

What is the weather like at the beginning of Chapter 7?

Hot

200

What percentage of your term grade is the term project?

15%

200

The decade in which the novel is set is often referred to as, 'The _______ 20s'?

The Roaring 20s
200

After Gatsby's death, Klipspringer calls asking for what to be returned to him?

Tennis shoes

200

What part of the original text will be on the last section of the midterm exam?

Meeting Daisy and Jordan (pp.7-8)

300

What were the four 'generic' symbols we looked at before moving on to those in our novel?

apple, eye, ring, raven/ crow

300

What is one of the three ideas we decided in class for the symbols of (Gatsby's) letter?

love; choice; authenticity

300

What does Tom find out Gatsby's drug-store business is really being used for?

selling alcohol (bootlegging)

300

What kind of machine does Nick compare Gatsby to?

(a machine) that measures earthquakes

300

What is (in short) The American Dream?

opportunity for each according to ability or achievement ... in which each man and each woman shall ... be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position

400

The following are examples of what technique?

- 'All hands on deck'

- 'Lend me your ears'

- 'I got some new threads'

synecdoche

400

During Nick's car ride with Gatsby in Chapter 4, what are four 'things' Gatsby tells Nick about his past?

[See book pp.65-67]

400

Finish the quote:

"In my ___ and more vulnerable years my ___ gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since."

younger; father

400

What is one of the 'messages' about the theme of "Love" given to you on the handout?

  • People sometimes fall in love with what people represent rather than who they actually are.
  • True love is not about always being happy, but sometimes surviving difficult times together.
  • Some opportunities for love are missed and unable to be recaptured.
  • If you cannot recognise the faults in a person, then it is not real love.
  • Love can grow over time, even for someone you do not initially like.
400

What are two features of the characters' dialogue in Chapter 1 that suggest the characters' relationships are superficial?

interruptions; repetition; overlap; murmuring; unanswered questions

500

What two other themes may come up on your midterm exam?

wealth and class; time; power and corruption; love

family and illusion vs reality

500

Finish the quote:

"The touch of a cluster of ____ revolved it slowly, tracing, like the leg of a compass, a thin ____ circle in the ____."

leaves; red; water

500

What three other symbols from The Great Gatsby are missing from the handout we looked at in class?

green light, pearl necklace, shirts, letter, alcohol, un-cut books

cars, clock, T.J. Eckleburg billboard

500

What is one explanation for this line by Nick?

"... No - Gatsby turned out all right at the end..."

Nick is knowingly lying to the reader

 Nick is lying to himself

 Jay Gatsby is all right, but not James Gatz

 Gatsby can finally rest in peace

 The truth is revealed about Gatsby; no more rumours or fakeness

 It’s not about getting the dream but rather the enjoyment of chasing it

 He is ‘all right’ in Nick’s opinion; a dead Gatsby is a beautiful Gatsby, he died before he could be corrupted and turn into people like Tom

500

Which is the correct final sentence of the novel?

A. So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.

B. So we drift on, boats against the current, drawn ceaselessly back into the past. 

C. So we beat on like boats against the current, being borne ceaselessly into the past.

D. So we struggle onward, boats against the current, pushed relentlessly into the past. 

A