A piece of literary history is on the block, but it's not exactly the domain of a starving artist: As the BBC reports, the Long Island mansion where F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby could be yours for somewhere just north of $3.8 million, per a rep of the listing agency. Fitzgerald and wife Zelda lived in the seven-bedroom house from 1922 to 1924; its location in the village of Great Neck Estates is believed to have served as Fitzgerald's inspiration for the novel's fictional West Egg. Fitzgerald did not, however, model Jay Gatsby's mansion on his own, though several in the area are thought to have inspired him. It's unknown who the current owner is. From Long Island, the Fitzgeralds moved to France, where he wrote and set Tender Is the Night. (More F. Scott Fitzgerald stories.)