The Great Gatsby (A BookHacker Summary) Buy on Amazon
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The Great Gatsby (A BookHacker Summary)

Author BookHacker
Publisher BookHacker
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Book Details
Author(s) BookHacker
Publisher BookHacker
ISBN / ASIN B00CE2H7EE
ISBN-13 978B00CE2H7E3
Marketplace India 🇮🇳
Description
Let’s be honest: sometimes you're asked to read an “important” book that you don't want or have time to read. Sometimes you try and it’s just so boring and impenetrable that you can’t get through it. And then, even worse, sometimes you’re asked to take a test or write a paper about it. If that sounds familiar, then BookHacker was designed for you.

BookHacker summaries strip away all the subtlety and stuffiness of literature’s classic works (100% “thou”-free guaranteed) and get right to the point. Taking away all the guess work, BookHacker presents the book's warm gooey center in a concise, logical and entertaining way. Just because literary classics can be dry and boring doesn't mean understanding them has to be.

In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, BookHacker transports you to West Egg, Long Island during the American Jazz Age through the eyes of the narrator, Nick Carraway. Nick tells the tragic story of his eccentric neighbor, Jay Gatsby, and his torrid (for 1922) obsession with Daisy Buchanan. Bookhacker connects the dots between Gatsby’s death (spoiler alert) and the corruption of the American Dream.

"I'm not going to lie--I used this to get out of having to read the book for class and it worked" Steven, 10th grade



“BookHacker gave me exact details and plotting, EXACTLY everything I needed to get through a dry, tough book” Rebecca, college freshman 



“This was surprisingly cool and honest. Would I want my teachers to know I used it? No, but that's why it's worth buying." Andrew, 12th grade

BOOKHACKER BREAKDOWN:

1. Executive Summary - This is the Who, What, Where, When, Why, How in 60 seconds or less.

2. Plot - We do the reading so you don’t have to. The essential plot points of the story.

3. Scenes - Every great story has a number of number of important moments that are crucial (read: "testable") to its understanding. These are those.

4. Characters - If you can’t figure out what this section is about, you should probably be coloring.

5. Analysis - Themes, symbolism, and all manner of insufferable literary nonsense.

6. Quotes - All the intimacy of the book with none of the commitment.

7. Popular Culture - Books have a way of finding their place in the cultural consciousness. You might want to know about that.

8. Extras - Media, links and leftovers.
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