The Great Gatsby chapter 4?

I am doing an essay The Great Gatsby chapter 4 and I need to write paragraphs on the language, narrative perspective, and the structure.
Any back will be much appreiciated .
Answers:
Omg! im Studying That For English Lit!

What My Teacher Keeps Saying Is.. Start Of Teh Paragraph With...
'' The Writer Fitzgerald Gives The Reader The Impression Of.. Blah Blah Blah..''

Cant Stand The Book
Gooood Luck!
hmmm i don't think you're supposed to use this site in your research dissertation but it can def help you understand about the book (btw, ugh i have to do that when i was in high conservatory!!) here is a link : http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/gatsby/section4.rhtml

hope this helps :)
Chapter IV is divided into three parts: 1. the list of guests at Gatsby's parties in July 1922, 2. the drive into New York, Nick and Gatsby, after which Gatsby introduced Nick to Wolfsheim and 3. Nick's developing relationship near Jordan Baker and her angle on Gatsby and Daisy (which is the reason she was called away at Gatsby's entertainment in Chapter III).

The list is an objective part--nominally. It's a hysterical survey of frivolity and absurdity, with comical, low animal names (James B. "Rot Gut" Ferret, the Fishguards, the Smirkes) and hints of the seaminess that underlie the glitter. The second part is more personal shows the good and unpromising sides of Gatsby. He's both fraudulent (thinks San Francisco is in the Midwest, is obviously lying) and genuine (the decoration he shows Nick is real). He has a slick, amateurish way of trying to buy Nick's services, which Nick resists, but only somewhat; he accepts his hospitality. The last part is most personal: this is the explanation of Gatsby's motivation as Jordan reveals it to Nick. The novel's direct unfolding of the romance starts here. Nick also finds himself attracted further to Jordan, although in that are uneasy hints underneath. She is willing to serve as assistant to him in his role as pander and has a "wan, scornful" smile. Yet she is attractive to and see (not without a hint of odd, possibly lesbian overtones) the attractions of Daisy for Gatsby. The expression is not comic: it is romantic and melancholy and faintly suspicious.


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