In the Novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, we are show an exclusive look at the social life of the superrich during the 1920’s. The story is narrated by Nick Carraway, a lonely bond salesman who has moved from the Midwest to the west egg, an exclusive New York suburb for the super wealthy. Nick rents a tiny cottage on the west egg, neighboring Gatsby’s extravagant estate. Gatsby, a man knows no one really knows anything about befriends Nick. As Nick become better aquatinted with Gatsby, Nick learns a number of unexpected things, one of which is that Gatsby is in love with Daisy Buchannan; Nick’s relative. As Nick shows the reader that Gatsby is not the man that everyone has speculated him to be and not the man Nick believes he is when he first meets him.
Shortly after moving next to Gatsby on the west egg, Nick is invited to one of his extravagant parties. While at the party Nick is brings out this topic with two other married couples & Jordan, one of the married couples claims that Gatsby was “a German spy During the war”(Fitzgerald-48) and that he got this information from a man that “grew up with him in Germany”(48). This is challenged by the other couple stating that he is not true “because he was in the American army during the war”(48), this leads us the question the credibility of their information. Nick acknowledges this information but also realizes the conflicting nature of both parties, but regardless this does influence Nick’s expectation for Gatsby’s personality and appearance. Everyone has played Gatsby up to be a mysterious dangerous and social man, but when Nick first meets Gatsby he gets another impression. Nick states that Gatsby possess “one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it”(52), this leads Nick to believe that Gatsby is a very confident man. But, later during the end of the party, Nick sees Gatsby “standing alone on the marble step” with no one “putting