As someone who absolutely adores 'The Great Gatsby' and will take any opportunity to talk someone's ear off about it, it was a wonderful surprise to read Wheeler's debut murder-mystery and discover the same melancholic, almost dream-like spirit Fitzgerald infused into his 1925 novel.
Greta Gatsby was a wonderful addition to the original cast of characters, bringing out a little more depth in each of their personalities and enhancing their qualities in every interaction.
You can definitely tell that 'The Gatsby Gambit' was written with a lot of love for F. Scott Fitzgerald's Roaring Twenties in lines of dialogue or introspection throughout that only GG readers would have picked up on (boy, did I feel like such a fangirl, grinning every time I found a little easter egg).
Story-wise, I was drawn more to the characters than the actual murder-mystery per se, and I found the addition of the house staff cast played really well into its overall message around class divides, justice, one's quality of character and the pervasive 'American Dream' that continues to drive so much advancement and inequality in this century (although, not really for the better, thanks to Trump).
The epilogue chapter was my fave - there's a couple of pages towards the end that are super relevant, not only to America, but to the world as a society:
**minor spoiler below**
"She'd been anticipating only one kind of remedy for the injustice she kept seeing... [but] it wasn't protection that [they] needed most. It was community... That was the whole point of the Constitution after all, was it not? Freedom of association, freedom of speech; it was the freedom to unite, to draw strength from numbers...
'Speech might be free,' Greta thought, 'but to be heard cost money.'
I honestly think if you enjoyed the morally gray and widely introspective, melancholic musings of Nick Carraway in 'The Great Gatsby', then you'll enjoy the extra depth that this novel brings to its characters within its Agatha Christie-like mystery.
This book is targeted towards what feels like for me, a very niche audience, but it definitely delivers.
4 stars 🌟
Fun fact:
The Great Gatsby was originally published 100 years ago on the 10th of April 1925, which is why the publishing date for this book made me grin like a fool. A perfectly timed homage!!