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Daisy Buchanan leaves the Plaza Hotel with Jay Gatsby.
Daisy From The book The Great Gatsby
The daughter's name is Pammy.Check pg. 117 in The Great Gatsby.
The great Gatsby quotes can be found in chapter 1 page 10. This is a well known book.
what type of style does it have the great gatsby fiction book
The DOI for the book "The Great Gatsby" is 10.4324/9780203359123.
The narrator in "The Great Gatsby" is Nick Carraway. He is a young man who moves to West Egg, Long Island, and becomes entangled in the lives of his wealthy and enigmatic neighbor, Jay Gatsby, and his cousin, Daisy Buchanan.
Daisy does very little in The Great Gatsby. She is shown to be defined and manipulated by the men which surround her. Daisy is married to Tom, they are wealthy and represent old money within the book. Daisy has a child which is treated as a possession and used in the novel as a conversation starter. Daisy is torn between her husband, Tom, and Gatsby. Before her marriage, she was loved by Gatsby, whom she pledged to wait for, while Gatsby gathered a fortune so that he would be a suitable husband. However, Daisy was unable to wait for Gatsby, another example of her lack of power, and married Tom. Daisy is unable to choose between her two lovers, and instead allows herself to be dominated by Tom, who takes her away from Gatsby at the end of the novel.
That would possibly be Gatsby himself, in that his love for Daisy is so all consuming it fuels his life. The book could be interpreted as Gatsby's tragic love story.
Jay Gatsby is lonely in The Great Gatsby because he longs for Daisy Buchanan, who represents his unreachable dream. Nick Carraway, the narrator, is not as alienated from others because he is more grounded and realistic, making genuine connections with people like Gatsby and Jordan Baker.
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.
All of his servants.