How Multiple Incidents Develop the Plot Line in the Great Gatsby
Essay title: How Multiple Incidents Develop the Plot Line in the Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald brilliantly wrote many novels as well as short stories. One of his best known works is The Great Gatsby. In the novel, the main character Jay Gatsby tries to obtain his lifetime dreams: wealth and Daisy Buchanan. Throughout the story, he works at achieving his goals while overcoming many obstacles. Fitzgeraldās plot line relies heavily on accidents, carelessness, and misconceptions, which ultimately reveal the basic themes in the story.
During the book, Fitzgerald is able to create a superior storyline by tying all the events in the story, directly or indirectly, together. Ernest Lockridge notes in his criticisms about the book:
Yet in a triumph of art, Fitzgerald makes even accidents seem unaccidental, he incorporates ārealā disorder within fictional order. He accomplishes this by repetition (in the ārealā world, repetition does not exist): the accident involving Tom and the chambermaid, the reference to both Nick and Jordan baker as ābad drivers,ā the wreck