Answer:
"Like much of Poe's fiction, 'The Tell-Tale Heart' is told by an unreliable narrator. This forces the reader to draw their own conclusion about the truthfulness of the narrator instead of taking the narrator's words at face value, as readers often do in fiction."
Explanation:
Mark me brainliest
I read this book last year so take this with a grain of salt.
Gene jumps from the tree to compete with Finny due to the fact that Gene is always trying to do better than Finny. He is put under the grasp of peer pressure due to Finny almost forcing him to do this. Ever since he first jumped Finny kept pressuring him to jump since he thought Gene enjoyed jumping.
Rather than uses this answer you should probably just reread chapters 3-4
Present evidence that supports the original claim.
2 . Uses the word implied wrong.