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The Great Gatsby

 

Other than Wilson's garage, the only other feature of note is a large advertisement for an optometrist, two large eyes that look over the barren area. When Tom and Nick arrive in the city, they visit with Myrtle and her sister, Catherine McKee. They gossip about Gatsby, who they believe to be related to the Kaiser or perhaps a murderer. Around Tom and away from her husband, the earthy Myrtle Wilson adopts an affected, pretentious tone. She and Tom argue about Daisy, and Tom breaks her nose. .
             Nick Carraway and Jordan Baker attend a party at Gatsby's mansion. At the party, few of the attendees are actually invited guests or even know Gatsby. Even Nick, when he first meets Gatsby, does not recognize him. Gatsby asks to speak to Jordan Baker alone, and after talking with Gatsby for a significant time she tells Nick that she learned some remarkable news which she cannot yet tell him. During this time, Nick and Jordan begin a half-hearted romance, spending time together occasionally while often losing sight of one another. .
             Some time later, Gatsby visits Nick's home and invites him to lunch. At this point Gatsby's origins are unclear, but Gatsby clarifies the story: he tells Nick that he is from a wealthy San Francisco and was educated at Oxford after serving in the Great War (for which he received a number of decorations). However, his tentative manner indicates that he may be lying to Nick. He tells Nick that Jordan Baker soon will reveal to Nick the remarkable news that Gatsby had told her. At lunch, Gatsby introduces Nick to an associate, Meyer Wolfsheim, a notorious criminal noted for fixing the 1919 World Series. When Nick sees the Buchanans there, Gatsby mysteriously avoids them. Later, Jordan Baker tells Nick the story of Gatsby, recounting that he had fallen in love with Daisy Buchanan before the war and implying that he still is in love with her. She also implies that Daisy has been in love with Gatsby as well.


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