Irony In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Nick Carraway has put Gatsby on a pedestal, but the irony is that he said Gatsby turned out all right, which is far from the truth. At the exposition of the book Nick starts by describing Gatsby in a high manner and also idolizing him but that is not the case, because Nick talks about Gatsby too early based on rumours before he sits down to get to know Gatsby and after getting to know we know to see how wrong Nick Caraway is. Fast forward to the end of the book where we see that George Wilson had shot Gatsby, due to George assuming that he had killed Myrtle. This is not quite the case, you see Daisy was the one driving and Gatsby wanted the accident from occurring to turning the wheel prevented the incident but it” everything happened so fast.”