Use Of Ideal Realism In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Ideal Novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, at the conclusion in his novel, The Great Gatsby, implies the traumatic reality Nick suddenly has to start going through without his best friend and mentor, Gatsby. Fitzgerald's purpose is to leave Nick understanding how great of a person Gatsby was; wanting to keep his legacy living forever. He utilizes his language to depict a gloomy representation of how the audience gets to infer Nick’s attitude. Fitzgerald begins his overview of how salient Gatsby was by depicting the beliefs he had. He captures imagery when Nick is sitting on the “old unknown world” reminiscing the certain choices Gatsby had made while at the end of Daisy’s dock. Fitzgerald leans on his word choice in order to explain Gatsby’s legacy.