
Stoddard’s Lectures
John L. Stoddard
Owl Eyes specifically picks out a Stoddard volume in chapter three.
CitationNovel, Chapter 3
The Great Gatsby · 1925
A library full of uncut pages. Gatsby owns the books he was never given the time — or class — to read. The list is a story of longing.
"They’re real," said Owl Eyes, holding the volume.
Gatsby’s library, as Owl Eyes notes in chapter three, is real — the books are not props. But the pages are uncut. The list below is what those uncut pages would have been: the early-1920s aspirational shelf of a self-made man trying to perform old money.

John L. Stoddard
Owl Eyes specifically picks out a Stoddard volume in chapter three.
CitationNovel, Chapter 3

Edith Wharton
The mirror image of his striving — Wharton on the cost of climbing.
CitationCharacter-fit

F. Scott Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald’s own prequel. Gatsby is the book’s Amory Blaine, decades older.
CitationAuthor canon
He owned them. He never read them. He died regardless.



Phonies on every shelf, but a few authors get a pass. Holden actually reads — Fitzgerald, Hardy, Isak Dinesen — between the cigarettes and the contempt.



The original quick-witted reader. Lizzie’s library: novels her mother disapproves of, conduct manuals she ignores, and the letters that change everything.



A summer in New York, a stack of borrowed books, a reading list shaped by a mind cracking open. Esther reads voraciously and never quite peacefully.
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