Hosted on MSN
The Most Misunderstood Line in ‘The Great Gatsby’
This F. Scott Fitzgerald classic famously details the story of a desire that burns so bright that it sets ablaze the person ...
DiCaprio’s restraint here is key. He doesn’t play Gatsby like the romantic hero we expect, but like a man whose every smile ...
For Cincinnati Ballet’s dancers, this is when the tough work begins. They’ve spent countless hours in the studio learning the choreography of Septime Webre’s full-length ballet version of “The Great ...
National Correspondent, "CBS News Sunday Morning" Lee Cowan is an Emmy-award-winning journalist serving as a national correspondent and substitute anchor for "CBS News Sunday Morning." Dotting the ...
Ninety-nine years ago, Scribner Books published then 28-year-old F. Scott Fitzgerald's third novel, The Great Gatsby. Set in the 1920s on Long Island, the book follows Nick Carraway. He witnesses a ...
“Can’t repeat the past? Why, of course you can!” is a line famously spoken by the title character in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby.” This year, writers are repeating the past — a lot — with ...
"The Great Gatsby," a century old this month, packs a lot into its 180 pages: love, death, money and the American dream, unfolding primarily, its narrator recounts, in "one of the strangest ...
“The idea that we’re the greatest people in the world because we have the most money in the world is ridiculous. Wait until this wave of prosperity is over! Wait ten or fifteen years! Wait until the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results