Nick, the narrator, is Daisy Buchanan's 3rd cousin.
The narrator, Nick Carraway, is cousin to Daisy Buchanan and becomes friends with her husband, Tom Buchanan, during the course of the story. Nick also serves as the intermediary between Daisy and Gatsby, who is in love with her.
In the Great Gatsby Jordan Taylor is the character that falls i love with Nick (the narrator).
The Buchanan's are Jay Gatsby's neighbors. Daisy Buchanan had fallen in love and promised to wait for Gatsby while he was at war. However instead of waiting she married the wealthy Tom Buchanan.
Jordan is escorted to Gatsby's party by Nick Carraway, the narrator of "The Great Gatsby."
Scott Fitzgerald wrote the Great Gatsby, but he uses a narrator who's name is Nick Carraway.
In chapter 7 of "The Great Gatsby," while Nick and Gatsby are at the Buchanans' house, Daisy's young daughter, Pammy, peers from the window briefly. Daisy's cousin, Nick Carraway, is the one who notices her looking out.
The narrator of "The Great Gatsby" is Nick Carraway. He is a character in the novel who serves as both a participant and an observer of the events unfolding around him. Nick is known for his reliability and honesty in recounting the story of Jay Gatsby and the other characters in the book.
Nick comes from a middle-class background in the Midwest. He is not as wealthy or as socially connected as the old money characters in East Egg, such as the Buchanans, but he is well-educated and has some financial stability.
"The Great Gatsby" is written in first-person point of view, with the character Nick Carraway serving as the narrator.
Daisy Buchanan is sitting with Jordan Baker when the narrator, Nick Carraway, arrives at her home in The Great Gatsby.
The narrator is Nick Carraway; Daisy's cousin, a friend of her husband Tom and the next door neighbour of Jay Gatsby.
In "The Great Gatsby," the narrator uses the phrase "one of those men" in the second paragraph to create a sense of mystery and intrigue about Jay Gatsby. By describing him as a mysterious figure, the narrator sets the tone for Gatsby's enigmatic character, which plays a crucial role in the novel's themes of illusion and identity. This phrase also foreshadows Gatsby's complex and multifaceted personality that will be explored throughout the story.
The narrator is a homodiegetic narrator. Nick is the narrator, but he is also part of the story, which is what a homodiegetic narrator is. Nick acts as a witness to the events, he observes and record the events without being involved personally. It can be said that Nick's narration is unreliable as he does not narrate the events as they happen, but changes the order of events (aporia). In this way he is able to incorporate proleptic (flash-forward) events. Nick also contradicts himself. He initially says that he 'reserves all judgement' but goes on to judge everyone and everything in the novel. For example, Myrtle, whom he consistently calls 'Mrs Wilson' to express his disapproval of her affair with Tom. I hope that helped.