So We Read On Audiobook By Maureen Corrigan cover art

So We Read On

How the Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why It Endures

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So We Read On

By: Maureen Corrigan
Narrated by: Maureen Corrigan
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About this listen

Conceived nearly a century ago by a man who died believing himself a failure, it's now a revered classic and a rite of passage in the reading lives of millions. But how well do we really know The Great Gatsby? As Maureen Corrigan, Gatsby lover extraordinaire, points out, while Fitzgerald's masterpiece may be one of the most popular novels in America, many of us first read it when we were too young to fully comprehend its power.

Offering a fresh perspective on what makes Gatsby great - and utterly unusual - So We Read On takes us into archives, high school classrooms, and even out onto the Long Island Sound to explore the novel's hidden depths, a journey whose revelations include Gatsby's surprising debt to hard-boiled crime fiction, its rocky path to recognition as a "classic", and its profound commentaries on the national themes of race, class, and gender.

With rigor, wit, and infectious enthusiasm, Corrigan inspires us to re-experience the greatness of Gatsby and cuts to the heart of why we are, as a culture, "borne back ceaselessly" into its thrall. Along the way, she spins a new and fascinating story of her own.

©2014 Maureen Corrigan (P)2014 Hachette Audio
Literary History & Criticism United States Words, Language & Grammar World Writing & Publishing Thought-Provoking
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Critic reviews

"Immensely likable, eclectic, and dynamic, Corrigan is as adept in her analysis of life as she is in her fresh and significant interpretations of books." (Booklist)
"Maureen Corrigan has produced a minor miracle: a book about The Great Gatsby that stands up to Gatsby itself." (Michael Cunningham)
"Corrigan's eclectic taste and skillful assessment of new writers as well as those long dead are particularly astute." - ( USA Today)
"Corrigan is erudite without being the least bit pretentious... Dipping into Leave Me Alone, I'm Reading is a little like visiting that friend whose house is always full of books and who always sends you home with one you're excited to read." ( Detroit Free-Press)
"Maureen Corrigan's brilliant Gatsby book takes you on a revealing expedition into the wilds of American literary culture. It might be called How Gatsby became "Great". An intoxicating cocktail of talent, celebrity, gangster noir, and the vicissitudes of reputation that create a classic." (Ron Rosenbaum, author of The Shakespeare Wars)
"So We Read On is a fine book on many levels, almost too many to list. This book is a love story about a book. It's an expression of love for one of the most lyrical and engaging and prescient novels in the English language. Maureen Corrigan writes not only with passion about her subject, she writes with an understanding of America and the elusive goal represented by the green light on Daisy's dock." (James Lee Burke)
"A brilliant and funny narrative of [Corrigan's] own reading life . . . Utterly original." ( Chicago Tribune)
"With her infectious enthusiasm, no one is better at bringing a book to life than Maureen Corrigan. Her vividly personal evocation of Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby is at once a labor of love, the story of a quest, and a mother lode of information and insight. As a biography of a novel, it reads like a novel." (Morris Dickstein, author of Gates of Eden and Dancing in the Dark)

What listeners say about So We Read On

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Charming!

This is a charming treatment of the Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s life, and the author’s own experiences. It blends together pleasantly and encourages subsequent listens to the book in question.

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Amazing and rich

I am so grateful to have “read” this book. I am coteaching Gatsby for my second and last time because I am retiring, and it has been so helpful. I have walked listening to it and had to stop to take notes on my phone. Thank you, Maureen Corrigan for so many lessons!

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I love everything Gatsby

Okay, so like tell me more about the gay interpretations of Gatsby? This feels like an introduction for me to go a bit deeper but didn’t really give any satisfying answers. Now, on the other hand, there is this audible original that is free on “who is jay Gatsby” and goes into this odd theory — and that gave me more than this but. It wasn’t bad. It felt like that tourist attraction she went on at Gatsby bay or what not. It showed me all these cool things but didn’t go deeper. I want more!! But maybe that’s the point is that it’s inexhaustible. It’s deep, it’s riveting and the audience wants more. Yup, I agree. Fast read, that’s a five star for me.

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Exquisite - A Journey Into Fitzgerald and Gatsby

It’s been a few years since I read Gatsby and a friend recommended this book to me.

It’s a wonderful book excellently read by the author.

Enough review though... I’ve dug out my 20 year old paperback of Gatsby and I’m starting to reread it and revel in it.

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3 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars

tttttttttttttttyyyyyyy

ttttgggghjjnbfcggbbgbbnnn. think. http. then. there thigh thigh hugged think think seeds deserving !k think death thinking deer seeds

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Reading Gatsby as an adult reveals its greatness!

Would you listen to So We Read On again? Why?

I recently returned to The Great Gatsby and was shocked by its greatness and relevance that I did not appreciate when I first read the novel as a younger man. Like the author states, The Great Gatsby reveals something new every time that a reader reads it again.

I will return to this book again after reading Gatsby again.

What did you like best about this story?

The author brings in her own experiences of reading and seeing Gatsby performed on stage, as a movie as well as a teacher. This brings a dimension to the analysis that is usually lacking in literary analysis.

Have you listened to any of Maureen Corrigan’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

I did not know Maureen Corrigan before purchasing this audio. I was surprised by the enthusiasm of the performer and checked who she was. Ah, the author is the performer which is absolutely perfect because the enthusiasm and delivery is so pitch perfect for this book. It is rare to find a commentary on a work to be as lively, intelligent and insightful as this. (Other great commentaries on classics: Professor Drout's work on Tolkien and Chaucer are great, Harold Bloom's "How to Read and Why")The passion of the performance comes from the passion for The Great Gatsby. The research done on Fitzgerald, the 1920s and the novel itself were all obviously done out of a love of the book, so it never feels like an imposed dry and didactic thesis paper.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

The portions of Fitzgerald's life story that reflect elements of the book make the book even more poignant.

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6 people found this helpful

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Literary criticism for everyone

The world needs more books like "So We Read On." There are many brilliant minds writing about the meaning and significance of great literature, but because they're writing to an academic audience in language laden with jargon, their important message is never heard by those who most need to hear it.

Corrigan's masterful melding of criticism, biography, and cultural commentary brings "The Great Gatsby" alive in a way that neither a dusty academic journal not a Hollywood blockbuster can do. Insightful yet entertaining, I hope this book serves as a model for other "biographies" of great literary works. Gatsby lives!

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The Great American Novel: An Orgastic Argument

Professor Corrigan, book critic for NPR and Georgetown professor, loves THE GREAT GATSBY, as do I. I devoured her delightful, didactic book on how and why it's the **Great American Novel** because, among other things, it splendidly captured Americans' quotidian desires for the *American dream,* our desire for desire ("there are only the pursued, the pursuing, the busy and the tired") and our quixotic belief, or perhaps subconscious romanticizing, that we can somehow recapture or relive the past, especially past loves (as Gatsby said to Nick, "Can't repeat the past? ... Why of course you can!").


------- "Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter--to-morrow we will run faster, stretch our arms farther. . . . And one fine morning------

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


Ms. Corrigan also provides a scintillating exploration of the author's tragic life and death and why, like many supremely talented artists before him, F. Scott Fitzgerald died in the depths of depression and perceived by himself and many others as a mediocre, has-been, with the splendor of his masterpiece unrecognized (by most) until several years after his death and yet endures as the most studied piece of literature in U.S. secondary education.

I highly recommend this book if you enjoyed The Great Gatsby or if you are fascinated with early 20th century America.

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Eye opening and revealing

I discovered this book while perusing a recent Audible sale. At first glance, it didn't seem like something I would pick but as I read the summary, about Maureen, and listener's reviews, I became very curious and seriously interested to learn more. Like most of the reviewers, I too had read The Great Gatsby in high school but was lost on any deep meaning of it at that time. Maureen is superb at providing the true historical facts of the era in which it was written, while explaining what was simultaneously happening in Scott Fitzerald's life as it impacted the story. I couldn't agree more with one of her final thoughts, that perhaps there is a different Gatsby for us to "get" when we read it at different stages of our own lives, and this is why the story continues to endure as one of the greats. Give it a try, and I bet you get caught up in it quickly and become inspired to read/listen to The Great Gatsby again, with new eyes.

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Eckleburg's Ears

If you could sum up So We Read On in three words, what would they be?

Gatsby. Fangirl. Party.

What did you like best about this story?

The analysis of the Great Gatsby and its incorporation into the comparison between it and America's beginnings and what America has become. Great cultural study.

What about Maureen Corrigan’s performance did you like?

Her passion for the topic came through.

Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

It made me want to read the Great Gatsby again, and it certainly made me appreciate it more.

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