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    certain way‚ to cover up his unreliability. This is because the narrator Jack from the start positions itself by knowing more than he says. In all three films done the grand unveiling of the unreliable narrators through other characters. In Memento and Fight Club as a direct request from a character (resp. Teddy and Tyler)‚ who has always known more than the protagonist‚ while the realization of The Usual Suspects is not vested in the narrator himself‚ but in the hearer (Agent Kujan) and receiver

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    similarity is that both stories show an unreliable narrator and the theme is madness. I think of Poe as an unpredictable narrator. Poe uses the unreliable narrator to force whoever is reading the story into thinking that he is crazy and unpredictable. In Tell-Tale Heart‚ the narrator compares animal features to things through his bad view of things. The narrator shows his fear by saying "vulture eye" to describe the old man’s eye. The eye caused the narrator to kill the old man. Both of the stories

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    end‚ the narrator is the murderer. From the very beginning to the very last sentence the reader will be hooked. “The Murder of Roger Ackroyd proved to be the first in a long string of superlative and highly original mystery novels that made Christie’s name synonymous with the mystery story.(Breznau n.p.)” Agatha Christie’s Murder of Roger Ackroyd is a traditional example of the mystery genre. Evidence of Murder of Roger Ackroyd as a mystery include the authors use of unreliable narrator‚ murder‚

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    portrayed right in the beginning. The author allows the reader to see from the beginning to the end the insanity of the man. This story is told in first person and it becomes a problem throughout the story. The narrator becomes an unreliable narrator. The reader cannot fully trust the narrator‚ and believe he is telling the whole truth. Throughout the story‚ the man tries to tell or impose on the reader that he is sane. He tries to explain to the reader that if he were crazy would he do something that

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    "I’m inclined to reserve judgments‚ a habit that has opened up many curious natures to me... " - Nick Carraway. In this classic novel‚ “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald uses Nick Carraway as a narrator. Nick changes profoundly over the course of the novel‚ and his transformation is just as intriguing as Gatsby’s dramatic story. Nick does not clearly know the past between Daisy and Jay Gatsby‚ Nick is too submerged in events and relationships therefore he is somewhat biased as exemplified

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    “Why does Changez feel out of place in both America and Pakistan?” Mohsin Hamid’s first-person novel “The Reluctant Fundamentalist” details the fictional story of a young Pakistani man is chasing corporate success on Wall Street‚ and suddenly finds himself embroiled in a conflict between his American dream and the unrelenting tug of his ties to his homeland. After being inducted into the corporate world of America when beginning work at Underwood Sampson‚ the novels protagonist‚ Changez becomes

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    Key Facts Kite Runner

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    English TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN • Los Angeles‚ CA; 2001 - 2003 DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION • May 2003 PUBLISHER • Riverhead Books NARRATOR • The Kite Runner is narrated by Amir four days after the final events of his decades-long story. POINT OF VIEW • The narrator speaks in the first person‚ primarily describing events that occurred months and years ago. The narrator describes these events subjectively‚ explaining only how he experienced them. At one point‚ another character briefly narrates a

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    Trapped and Unreliable The two short stories “The Yellow Wallpaper” Charlotte Perkins Gilman and “The Cask of Amontillado” Edgar Allan Poe are stories that appear to be totally different from each other‚ but are actually very similar; one of those similarities is the theme of entrapment the stories show entrapment on both a physical and a mental level. We see in these two stories individuals that are not only trapped physically but trapped mentally within their own minds not able to free themselves

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    machine imagery help emphasise the ambiguity of the novel by placing the reader through the mind of Bromden. Through using these techniques Kesey mystifies the plot which makes the reader to ponder over whether the plot is real or hallucinated. An unreliable perspective is used through the text‚ employing a narrative voice which results in ambiguity‚ leading the reader to think about the reality of the novel.

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    interprets it in a different way. Turn of the Screw builds a close relationship between the novel and it’s readers. The reactions to this can be psychologically analyzed by how James developed his story. He raises rhetorical questions‚ provides an unreliable narrator‚ unexpected changes‚ an interesting prologue‚ and useful imagery in order to provide a sense of vagueness that only the readers

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