The Great Gatsby Narrative

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As The Great Gatsby opens, Nick Carraway, the story's narrator, remembers his upbringing and the lessons his family taught him. Readers learn of his past, his education, and his sense of moral justice, as he begins to unfold the story of Jay Gatz. The narration takes place more than a year after the incidents described, so Nick is working through the filter of memory in relaying the story's events. The story properly begins when Nick moves from the Midwest to West Egg, Long Island, seeking to become a "well-rounded man" and to recapture some of the excitement and adventure he experienced as a soldier in WWI. He tries to make his way as a bond salesman, he rents a small house next door to a mansion which, it turns out, belongs to Gatsby. Daisy Buchanan, Nick's cousin, and her …show more content…

Nick's initial impulse is to call out to Gatsby, but he resists because Gatsby "gave a sudden intimation that he was content to be alone." It was while watching Gatsby that Nick witnesses a curious event. Gatsby, standing by the waterside, stretches his arms toward the darkness, trembling. This gesture seems odd to Nick, because all he can make out is a green light, such as one finds at the end of a dock, across the Sound. Looking back at the mysterious figure Nick realizes that Gatsby has vanished. My analysis of this book is very simple. I believe that F Scott Fitzgerald wrote the Great Gatsby in order to Entertain, or course, but also to inform. Fitzgerald has put in his story many hidden messages to the book. One of them being do not judge a book by it’s cover. Nobody knows who Gatsby is, and everyone starts to think that he has done all these crazy things. People say that he shot a man, or he stole to get his money when all of this isn’t the real truth. Everyone jumped to conclusions that he was this really amazing guy, and the actual truth is that he is just a regular

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