Daisy Buchanan.
No, Myrtle Wilson is the mistress of Tom Buchanan in The Great Gatsby. Tom is married to Daisy Buchanan, who becomes entangled in a love affair with Jay Gatsby.
She has no dreams. All she wants is money and stats. Voila. That's why she married tom ...
it says on page 81 of the book that they were married in june, and before that it mentions the date 1917. however, if you read further it says "next autumn" so it is only an extimate, so they either got married: June, 1918 or June, 1919
Tom
In "The Great Gatsby," Tom Buchanan is married to Daisy Buchanan, who is the cousin of Nick Carraway (the narrator). Jay Gatsby is a former lover of Daisy's and his pursuit of her drives much of the plot. Tom and Daisy have a daughter together named Pammy.
The Buchanan's are Jay Gatsby's neighbors. Daisy Buchanan had fallen in love and promised to wait for Gatsby while he was at war. However instead of waiting she married the wealthy Tom Buchanan.
Tom
In "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the titular character is deeply in love with Daisy and has returned only to find that she has married a brute of a man named Tom. Gatsby urges Daisy to tell Tom that she does not love him and that she never loved him, but ultimately she cannot go through with it.
tom buchanon
Tom Buchanan says Daisy loved him when she married him and she loves him now on page 135 of "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Tom Buchanan says this line to Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby. Tom becomes suspicious of Gatsby's wealth and questions where he got the money to afford such an extravagant car.
Tom Buchanan drives a blue coupe in "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.