Wilson believes Gatsby is a killer because he mistakenly concludes that Gatsby was driving the car that killed Myrtle Wilson. This misunderstanding leads Wilson to seek revenge on Gatsby, ultimately resulting in Gatsby's death.
No, Tom Buchanan did not kill George Wilson. George Wilson kills Gatsby in The Great Gatsby, believing that Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife. Tom Buchanan reveals Gatsby's involvement to Wilson, but he is not directly responsible for George Wilson taking this action.
George Wilson is the Husband of Myrtle Wilson.
Wilson mistakenly believed that Gatsby was having an affair with his wife, Myrtle. In his grief and confusion after Myrtle's death, Wilson sought revenge and shot Gatsby at his mansion before turning the gun on himself. Wilson's actions were motivated by a sense of betrayal and despair, rather than a deliberate intention to kill Gatsby.
Myrtle Wilson is Gatsby's secret mistress and George Wilson is Myrtle's actual wife. George and Myrtle live in the valley of ashes. George Wilson shoots Gatsby because he thinks that Myrtle cheated on him with Gatsby.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby," Wilson shoots Gatsby in Chapter 8, on the last page of the chapter.
George Wilson commits suicide in the great gatsby.
After shooting Gatsby, George Wilson takes his own life by shooting himself. This tragic turn of events is a culmination of Wilson's despair over his wife's affair with Gatsby and his belief that Gatsby was responsible for her death.
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George Wilson reaches Jay Gatsby's house by driving there in Gatsby's yellow car, which was borrowed by Gatsby's friend Nick Carraway. Wilson is on the hunt for Gatsby after discovering that Gatsby's car was involved in the accident that killed his wife, Myrtle.
Myrtle Wilson was in her early thirties when she was killed in The Great Gatsby.
In the Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson's hometown is called The Valley of Ashes. The Great Gatsby was written by Scott Fitzgerald.