Throughout the entire novel, Gatsby is portrayed by Fitzgerald as a very elusive and mysterious character. Whether this is through the lack of information given to us about his past, or the gossip which the reader and Nick are exposed to at his parties, or even his associations with the mafia boss Wolfsheim who ‘fixed the World’s Series back in 1919’.
The predominant method through which Fitzgerald makes Gatsby a mysterious character is the way we rarely receive information about his younger years; however, when we do it is very disjointed from the text and it is difficult to understand the full story of Gatsby’s life. And when it does in fact arrive the way Nick constantly analyses the preceding information suggests to the reader that the information given to us must be taken with a pinch of salt. For example, Gatsby tells Nick in chapter six that he was ‘educated in Oxford’, however, straight after this claim Nick writes how he ‘knew why Jordan Baker had believed he was lying’. Nick also tells us the reason he had come into a ‘good deal of money’ was because his ‘family all died’. In the next sentence Nick describes how for a moment he believed ‘he was pulling my leg’. Then Gatsby boasts of all his experiences in Europe where he lived like a ‘young rajah’ who enjoyed ‘collecting jewels’ and ‘painting a little’. This seems improbable and Nick evens tells the reader how he ‘with an effort managed to restrain his laughter’. This emphasises the mystery of Gatsby as although Nick was told this face-to-face, the manner of Gatsby makes Nick cautious to believe him. Furthermore, this mystery of Gatsby is shown at his parties at his extravagant ‘Hôtel de Ville’ as the guests enjoy ‘gossiping’ about their host, Gatsby. This attitude of disrespect was indicative of the Jazz Age as a result of the emergence of the flappers, who enjoyed behaving in unconventional ways and dressing unlike their relatives who had grown up in the Victorian era, and prohibition which resulted...