A major theme in the novel Gone Girl is disenchanted marriage. Amy and Nick both chose to grow apart with manipulation but do not physically stay away from each other in the end. When Amy went missing, that was the first clue something was not right with her and Nick. When Nick came home from work he did not know where Amy was so he searched for her and could not find her. In the novel Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn Nick says “She wasn’t on the water, she wasn’t in the house. Amy was not there. Amy was gone.” (Flynn,24). This shows that Nick saw Amy was gone. Nick had also got into the habit of drinking his stress away since Amy had disappeared. Nick says “I didn’t listen to Go about the booze. I finished half the bottle sitting on her sofa by myself,” (Flynn, 57). Another Clue was Amy started to think negatively about her self before she disappeared which could have encouraged her to run away. Amy says “Sometimes I look at myself and I think: no wonder Nick finds me ridiculous, frivolous, spoiled, compared to his mom.” (Flynn,154) In this scenario Amy is judging …show more content…
Amy in fact knew about the affair before she ran away. In the novel it says “Maybe it was the clue I couldn’t figure out, but I suddenly felt like I’d overlooked something. I’d made some huge mistake, and my error would be disastrous.” (Flynn,136). In this scene Amy rants about how she knew Nick was cheating and was keeping it in. When Amy ran away Nick in fact was still seeing Andie the girl he was having the affair with and he didn’t seem to worried about Amy. Nick says “she kissed me again and climbed onto a lap, where she straddled me,” (Flynn,143) this was the night after the detectives were questioning him about Amy. To top it off Andie confirmed to the public that Nick was indeed having an affair with her. Andie said “I did engage in an affair with Nick Dunne from April 2001 until July of this year.”
‘She might have the decency not to telephone him at dinner time. Don't you think?’” (Fitzgerald 16). From this quotation, the reader understands that Nick’s mistress is not a secret. The reader also learns that by Jordan calling her some woman, it hints to the reader that maybe this is not the first time Tom has had a mistress.
Both Nick and Gatsby were loners as well and neither cared for the party scene. Nick sat back and watched everyone, without in fact, participating. This is first apparent when Nick went against his will with Tom and Myrtle to the apartment in New York City, where he stayed by himself as much as possible. From the front porch of his house he enjoyed just watching the goings on at Gatsby’s parties. Even when he begins to attend the parties, he did not interact on a social level. Nick was just as content to view things from the sidelines, noticing everything that transpired, even what the servants were doing. Gatsby orchestrated parties with the intention of attracting Daisy, which is illustrated by the fact that he did not actually attend his own parties and that Gatsby only knew a few of his guests. The people that attended his parties were not invited they just showed up. The only reason he started a relationship with Nick was because he found out through Jordan that Nick was Daisy’s cousin. Other than that, the only people with whom Gatsby interacted with were the ones he did business with.
While Nick is just Gatsbys neighbor, he only sees his parties but never personally speaks to Gatsby himself. Until one day Nick received an invitation to one of Gatsby's parties. Nick seemed to be a bit lonely but not a sad person, he attends the party and is amazed by all the people and things that are going on. He sees all the people, young and old just pouring into Gatsby's mansion and he's wondering how Gatsby could have invited all these people in such short notice. So Nicks objective was to find Gatsby and formally introduce himself but he was nowhere to be found. Then Nick decided to give up after he realizes that he was the only one who had actually been invited and have a few drinks, until he finds himself
Being exposed to all the lack of moral and ethics, Nick slowly started becoming dishonest and egotistical
In the first chapter, Nick Carraway presents himself as a narrator. He refers to himself as having a high morale value. Despite this, Nick finds himself indulging in the lavish parties and thoughtless people of New York. His romance with Jordan Baker illustrates this perfectly. Nick clearly acknowledges her fraudulent personality and her inability to be truthful. “She was incurably dishonest […] I suppose she had begun dealing in subterfuges when she was very young to keep that cool, insolent smile turned to the world.” Nonetheless, Nick is still attracted to her. His Midwestern values were all but forgotten in exchange for the allure of
If Nick were gay, F. Scott Fitzgerald would have admitted it to the reader. In the end of chapter two, before he meets, and falls instantly in love with Gatsby. He is with Tom, who wanted Nick to meet “his girl”, Myrtle. They are at Myrtle’s apartment with her sister Catherine and some neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. McKee¬—the former begins "a pale feminine
Based on Nick talking about what it would be like to bash Amy’s head in, I think Nick might have done exactly that. When Nick arrived at his house the ottoman was turned over, books were on the floor, and the iron was left on. I cannot imagine Amy not putting up a fight against Nick. Detective Rhonda Boney, found blood splatter in the kitchen; which certainly hints that she might have been killed. Another person that may have been involved with the case is their neighbor Carl.
Nick in the book goes through a lot of trouble and drama that most people would want to stay away from. Nick however, stays involved. Many people would just believe that it’s simply a curiosity about this fascinating
Nick claims that he was often drunk throughout the events, and doesn't remember most of what happens. This is shown in Chapter 1 on page 33, "I have been drunk just twice in my life and the second time was that afternoon, so everything that happened has a dim hazy cast over it although until after eight o'clock the apartment was full of cheerful sun" (Fitzgerald page 33). Also, at the end of Chapter 2 he wakes up beside Mr. McKee, who is in his underwear, looking at pictures, and wondering what happened the night before. “Then there were bloody towels upon the bathroom floor, and women’s
Nick seems to side with the reader in his horror at being trapped with Amy in fear that she will attempt, and finally succeed in destroying him if he tries to leave her. Nick knows, that Amy is in control of his life now, including his own words. She shows this by making him delete his book about her in which he reveals that Amy is a “psycho bitch” and tells the world about the terrible things she has done (Flynn 550). If Amy were like a classic female heroine the reader would feel vindicated, as the cheating husband is finally becoming the “perfect” man that his loving wife deserves. However, it is Nick who is never going to receive vindication for being entrapped by a woman who now controls his every move. Instead, the reader feels betrayed,
Amanda went into this show knowing that Nick had his eye on someone else. They had a nice date together, but Stanton didn't feel the sparks with him. Amanda shared that if the cameras were not on them, then Nick wasn't touching or kissing her. She was very aware that he was waiting on Jen to get there.
On the morning of Amy’s disappearance, an investigation is started up. Just like in any other case, Nick was questioned first in order to eliminate him straight away from the list of suspects. However things did not skew in Nick’s favour once the questioning started. “It was my fifth lie to the police.
It seems as though Amy is an emotional wreck. When Amy, Nick, and another couples planned to go out for drinks, Nick never made an appearance. Nick has been drinking a lot of alcohol, after Amy had a conversation with him about how she thinks he needs to cut back on the drinking. It was clear Amy was upset when she wrote in her diary: “Poor me, writes Amy at the beginning of this latest time travel diary entry.” (Flynn, 103) This affiliated Amy with a feeling of emptiness. It seems as if Amy is searching for sympathy because she longs for Nick to want her in his life. It may look to one like a one-sided relationship. Amy is constantly reminding Nick of his responsibilities and duties. While, Nick does not do the same for Amy and appears to be almost empty-minded in the relationship. Amy was looking for sympathy to help her cope with the absence of a strong relationship
Nick alerts the police but finds that they might not be on the same side. In the second half of the book it becomes apparent that the narrators have not been fully truthful in their accounts. Nick has been having an affair with one of his college students and Amy is trying to frame him for her murder. Amy is hiding out in a motel when she is robbed by two other tenants. Left with no
Nick is unreliable because he sees himself as morally better than everyone and that leads him to have a bias for himself. Having a bias for him is a problem because he is both the narrator and a character in the novel which means that he gets to choose how he presents other characters and how he presents himself; as a result, he makes himself look better, and other people look worse in certain situations. He makes himself look better by not telling readers details of what is happening back home: “I know that first I had to get myself definitely out of that tangle back home” (58). This passage is significant because it shows that he has a commitment or a relationship back home that he is running away from. He also writes letters home once a