Gatsby enters the house with a more constricted and darker appearance but leaves the house radiant and happy after meeting Daisy.
<h3>How does the book show Gatsby's appearance?</h3>
- The book shows him with someone with tanned skin.
- The book shows him as someone with short hair.
- The book shows Gatsy looking withdrawn and nervous before meeting Daisy.
- The book shows Gatsby beaming after meeting Daisy.
"The Great Gatsby" is a book that describes its protagonist, Gatsby, in a very indirect way. The reader has no details on Gatsby's physical appearance, knowing only that he has tanned skin and short hair. Most of Gatsby's description is done indirectly, through dialogue and narration.
With this, the reader only knows that before the encounter with Daisy, Gatsby looked a little withdrawn and nervous. This was due to uncertainty about how Daisy would react to meeting him. However, the narration shows that after the meeting, when he left the mansion with Nick and Daisy, Gatsby was radiant, happy, and excited.
Learn more about indirect characterization:
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This means that sometimes what actually happened historically will be warped to make one side seem more righteous.
The correct answer is D <em>"while the narrator is a real person, his encounter with the cat is fictional."</em>
This is because we know for sure the narrator does exist, the story he tells is takes place on Earth but we don't know if the cat does. He brings joy and light to the world but it obvius it does not exist, he is talking to it while it is outside the real world.