Miss Clack is unreliable narrator because she is biased and has very strong religious views. The character of Miss Clack is from the book The Moonstone.
Miss Clack is biased on everything she does. Although her narrative is rather entertaining, it mostly relates to her religious views. It is not necessarily unreliable, but it does not relate to the book very much. She informs the reader about the engagement and the break of it between Miss Verinder and Mr. Godfrey Ablewhite, but other than that, her story consists of her trying to change the eternal fate of the characters she runs into. She claims that she does this because she truly cares about their ultimate destiny. She is truly shown to be not admirable because of her actions, and her 'addiction' to handing out Christian pamphlets. --LT
Unreliable narrator means the plot device that the narrator of the story is not sincere, or introduces a bias in his/her narration and possibly misleads the reader, hiding or minimizing events, characters, or motivations.
Boom, Boom, Boom, Boom, or Clack, Clack, Clack, Clack
deliberately does not tell the whole truth.
Yes, the first person narrator may be unreliable and appear to "lie" to the reader, or at least contradict him.herself. An example is the narrator in Nabokov's Pale Fire; he insists the central 999-line poem is about him, while it becomes obvious to the reader that it is not.
Miss Clack is biased on everything she does. Although her narrative is rather entertaining, it mostly relates to her religious views. It is not necessarily unreliable, but it does not relate to the book very much. She informs the reader about the engagement and the break of it between Miss Verinder and Mr. Godfrey Ablewhite, but other than that, her story consists of her trying to change the eternal fate of the characters she runs into. She claims that she does this because she truly cares about their ultimate destiny. She is truly shown to be not admirable because of her actions, and her 'addiction' to handing out Christian pamphlets. --LT
unreliable narrator
unreliable. An unreliable narrator is a character whose interpretation of events in a story differs from the author's or the reader's. This can create ambiguity and add layers of complexity to the narrative.
an objective narrator only says what really happens
unreliable
How honestly does the narrator represent the world Does the narrator have something to hide/cover up. Does he have reason to "pad the truth" Does the narrator actually understand what is going on Is the narrator biased Does the narrator contradict what he/she says
Unreliable narrator. The usual example of this is 'The Cask of Amontillado' by Edgar Alan Poe, wherein the narrator Montresor is progressively seen as been mad rather than credible.
a narrator who doees not view similarly like others
No, the narrator in "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin is not considered unreliable. The narrator presents the story in a straightforward manner and provides insight into the thoughts and emotions of the protagonist, Mrs. Mallard.
An unreliable narrator would reflect their bias in their telling of the story.
Some examples of an unreliable narrator in Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt include lack of better terms and self-dramatizing.
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