no.
a normal person.
Josie-Jo is Sam Westing's long-lost daughter. She discovers her true identity and relationship to Sam Westing by the end of the story in "The Westing Game."
no they are the same person
Turtle figured out that Sam Westing was a wax dummy during her investigation of the Westing Game mystery. She discovered that the person she thought was Sam Westing actually had a wax head, leading her to unravel the truth behind the elaborate game.
Yes, Sam Westing died before the events of the story in "The Westing Game." Sandy McSouthers, who is Sam Westing in disguise, did not die. He faked his death as part of an elaborate plot to test the heirs and find his true successor.
Jake Wexler is related to Sam Westing because he is married to Grace Windkloppel and Sam Westing's real last name is Windkloppel but if Jake wasn't married to Grace he would't be related to Sam Westing since Jake is Jewish.
Jake Wexler and Madame Hoo did not receive their money in "The Westing Game" because they were not the true heirs of Sam Westing. Instead, the true heir was revealed to be Turtle Wexler, who had solved the Westing mystery and carried out Sam Westing's final wishes.
The true object is to find Sam Westing's forth disguise. Although, to distract the hers from the true object, The will suggests murder and Sam sacrifices Crow (his queen).
Yes, Violet Westing and Sam Westing are related. Sam Westing is Violet's father in the book "The Westing Game" by Ellen Raskin.
Barney Northrup, Sam W. Westing, Julian R. Eastman, Sandy McSothers, and Windy Windkloppel are all the same person.
The surprising information that linked James Hoo to Sam Westing in The Westing Game was that they were actually the same person. Sam Westing was using the alias James Hoo as part of his elaborate scheme to gather potential heirs for his inheritance game.
In the book "The Westing Game" by Ellen Raskin, Turtle did not actually kill Sam Westing. The entire mystery revolves around a fictional murder orchestrated by Westing himself as part of a bigger game to reveal the true heir to his fortune. Turtle's motive throughout the story is to solve the mystery and win the Westing game, not to harm anyone.