Nick Carraway moving to the West Egg on Long Island to work on the New York Stock Exchange. On the other side of the bay cage his cousin, Daisy, along with her husband Tom, an old aristocrat who inherited the great house on East Egg. As early early in the first chapter we get that right Tom Buchannan has a lady in New York, still tviheld Daisy on the façade of the small family. Jay Gatsby is a nouveau riche man who arranges extravagant celebrations for all who will come to Nick's neighboring house. No one knows where he comes from or why did he is rich, but it is speculated great heroism during the First World War. As the Nick and Gatsby develop a closer friendship, get Nick know why Gatsby bought that big house on West Egg, is that he wants to live close to their teen love, Daisy. And thus is the basis for the drama triangle added.
Nick Carraway has narrators and perspectives in the novel. He is a figure we seldom come close, personal, until the last chapter. He participates at the party at Gatsby and he speaks with both Daisy, Tom and Gatsby. He and a superficial relationship with Jordan, her friend Daisy. But it is triangle drama between sugar bowl and creamer set the couple Buchannan and rear new rich and fascinating Jay Gatsby novel shoe. Nick, that's me-the person and the narrator stands on the sidelines as an observer, reporter or observer, while he is participating in the drama as well as their emergence. As the reader is I have to rely on Nick, a man who shares very little of himself. It is an interesting forteljarteknisk grip, creating tension in the text. On one hand, I feel a certain distance to Nick, because he gives so little of himself. On the other hand, I believe that he is the only one of the characters, that I can actually trust. Gatsby, who turns out to have lit the entire fortune is, on smuggling, which changed its name to come closer to the kingdom and who has spent much of his life to building a facade of being noticed by Daisy, is not reliable. Daisy, who does not dare to step out of the marriage and returned to her teen love, even though husband Tom are not faithful and nor valued her, for fear his good name and reputation to the total of all tell this story. And Tom has an all too clear agenda, he will reveal Gatsby as a deception sugar bowl and creamer set so that Daisy will be carried out fully his left. We must rely on Nick, he's the only one who can tell this story. But the narrator sugar bowl and creamer set does not share more of yourself, create a tension in the text.
The Great Gatsby is often described as the great American novel, the novel that shows up while crushing the American dream. For the period after the First World War could anyone the get rich. But anyone the could not be aristocrats. And while Gatsby and Nick, who has lit up rich in bootlegging and shares, can afford to live on the West Egg, it's just the right aristocratic ancestors as Tom Buchannan and his wife, who can live in an inherited mansion on the East Egg. This geographical difference between the two areas is a clear class marker and an almost obvious sugar bowl and creamer set symbol in the novel. For while both spritsmuglaren Gatsby and Nick aksjespekulanten nearest to perish in the vulgar opulence of the new rich, survive couple Buchannan machinations and come away with dignity in stocks. The Great Gatsby depicts a rikmannsliv with celebration and abundance. Gatsby, sugar bowl and creamer set who is attracting numerous medical sugar bowl and creamer set people lavish and generous parties, have when it comes down to it no one is there for him in the last chapter. And here is again manifest in contrasts. It has the new rich Gatsby is not true. And thus is the American dream picked apart.
Nice mention of a well composed novel, but the book moves you? It has enough probably with the narrator to do, see what you point out, but I remember that I was engaged by the text, and I therefore would not have pointed sugar bowl and creamer set to this as 'the great American novel', a book should be something so ambitious then!
Both and. I know that the great distance that is created between me and narrators sugar bowl and creamer set fascinates me. I will not completely catching up Nick, while I have to trust what he says. I will not be grasped by him personally, but I will be gripped by what he says, especially the history of Gatsby, which more or less perish in the attempt to live the "American dream". I mean there are other American novels that engage me more. At the same feel I The Great Gatsby deserves the status it has gained, because he picks one from the other myta that anyone the can move up and forward in American society. The book is far more realistic than a lot of other novels sugar bowl and creamer set about "the American dream" whose dream is being fulfilled in a big and resounding happily-ever-after.
In light of the discussion on FB the past few days, I put a little comment here! Interestingly o
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