A sequel to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s masterpiece imagines the life of a gay Jay Gatsby.
“I had scarcely got Gatsby across the threshold…when to our astonishment it became clear that there was something resembling life in him yet,’’ writes narrator Nick Carraway at the beginning of Odasso’s novel. Instead of dying from a gunshot wound, as he did at the end of Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, this Gatsby recovers under Nick’s tender care and in his bed. Somewhere between fan fiction and literary thought experiment, Odasso’s book sets up Nick and Gatsby as lovers and ships them off on a steamy honeymoon through Canada, England, and France. The couple settle in Boston, where Nick’s cousin Daisy reappears in their lives. Daisy created tension in the original and has come back to complicate things. This time, the drama revolves around her daughter, Pam. A bright and sassy girl with more love for books than boys, Pam is starting to realize who she really is—and who she could be—with the help of her supportive gay uncles. As in the first book, keeping up appearances is a dilemma for all the characters, but here, Nick and Gatsby’s tender love for each other helps them push through society’s expectations. There is something both silly and charming about the premise. Casual fans of the original will probably have a good laugh before getting drawn into the rather engaging romance Odasso has created (although they may need a Cliff’s Notes refresher before the first chapter). The novel’s prose feels impressively witty and natural—if more inspired by the general time period than Fitzgerald himself. The sex also maintains a careful balance: passionate and surprising without being lurid. But Odasso seems more interested in a queer family navigating the world of The Great Gatsby than directly engaging with or reimagining Fitzgerald’s mythic figures. Ironically, true Fitzgerald devotees may find this Gatsby to be a bit of a fraud.
An intriguing and delightful queer romance that does not quite bring Gatsby back to life.