[PDF] describe new york city in the great gatsby

Here Nick characterizes New York City as an exciting, stimulating place where secret, scandalous relationships can get lost in the noise of the city. To Nick, the anonymous people on the city's bustling streets are part of a “constant flicker” that notably also includes machines.
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  • How is New York described in The Great Gatsby Chapter 2?

    The fourth and final setting of the novel, New York City, is in every way the opposite of the valley of ashes—it is loud, garish, abundant, and glittering.
    To Nick, New York is simultaneously fascinating and repulsive, thrillingly fast-paced and dazzling to look at but lacking a moral center.

  • Why is Gatsby well known in New York?

    One of the reasons that Gatsby has become so famous around New York is that he throws elaborate parties every weekend at his mansion, lavish spectacles to which people long to be invited.
    One day, Gatsby's chauffeur brings Nick an invitation to one of these parties.

  • What do Tom and Gatsby argue about in New York City?

    Angry, he has the entire group travel to the Plaza Hotel in New York City.
    There, he confronts Gatsby, leading to an altercation between the two.
    During their argument, Gatsby tells Tom that Daisy doesn't, and has never loved him; instead, she loves Gatsby.

  • What do Tom and Gatsby argue about in New York City?

    One day, Nick and Gatsby drive to the city in Gatsby's car.
    Gatsby talks about his life, claiming his parents are from San Francisco—which he oddly refers to as a Midwest town—and adding that he studied at Oxford.
    He also says he was a jewel collector and a war hero, showing Nick a medal.

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