Gatsby: Death of an Irishman
F. Scott Fitzgerald and His Search for Identity
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Narrado por:
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Scott Fleming
Sobre este título
“… he started as one man I knew and then changed into myself.” – F. Scott Fitzgerald
Gatsby: Death of an Irishman is a fresh and compelling insight into the life of F. Scott Fitzgerald and the genesis of his most iconic character.
Underpinning Fitzgerald’s brilliant but turbulent life was his complex, evolving and surprising relationship with his Irish identity. From childhood shame at being ‘common’ to a patriotic immersion in Irish literature and revolutionary politics at Princeton. But the shame never went away, reinforced when the poor boy found he could not marry the rich girl. Fitzgerald tried to escape it, first through his imagination as a boy and self-invention as a young man, and then in his writing and self-destructive lifestyle.
This is a dramatic, evocative and vivid narrative of the life of F. Scott Fitzgerald and the creation of The Great Gatsby, the story of American identity rather than the American Dream.
About the Author
Patrick O'Sullivan Greene published his first book, Crowdfunding the Revolution: The First Dáil Loan and the Battle for Irish Independence, in 2020. Patrick was invited to make a courtesy visit to present the book to President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins. His second book, Revolution at the Waldorf: America and the Irish War of Independence, was published in December 2022. Patrick has written articles for the Irish Times, been interviewed for national media and has been a guest on leading history and economic podcasts. He has presented at the Dublin Book Festival, the American Irish Historical Society in New York, the Princess Grace Irish Library in Monaco, and at the national conference of the American Conference for Irish Studies. Patrick has worked in business for most of his career and is back in his native Killarney after spells in Dublin, London, New York and France.