Tom Buchanan wants Nick to meet his mistress, Myrtle Wilson. Nick first meets Myrtle in her husband's auto shop. Tom tells Myrtle to take the next train so they can meet up in the city. Tom, Nick, and Myrtle all meet up and they then proceed to walk around the city and later on go to Myrtle's sister's house.
Catherine is the sister of Myrtle Wilson, the women Daisy ran over in Gatsby's car. She is only metionned twice in the novel. First, at the party Nick was present at in New York and secondly after Gatsby's death, where she gives a statement saying that Myrtle did not know Gatsby in any way, shape, or form.
The scene where the wreck is first talked about it on the bottom of page 137.
Nick finds Myrtle Wilson to be gaudy and obnoxious when he first meets her. He is struck by her loud and pretentious behavior as she tries to impress others with her extravagance.
Daisy and Gatsby first meet in "The Great Gatsby" at a party in Louisville in 1917. Gatsby was an officer stationed near Daisy's home, and they fell in love during this time.
They meet on a train to New York as Myrtle was visiting her sister. Myrtle was infatuated by the way Tom looked, and neither of them could stop looking at each other. She was so fixed on him that Myrtle did not even realize that she was getting a taxi with him and not a train car.
Gatsby and Daisy first meet in the novel "The Great Gatsby" at a party in Louisville in 1917. Gatsby was an officer stationed near Daisy's home, and they fell in love during this time.
The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, was first published in 1925.
Myrtle and Tom first met at a train station in the Valley of Ashes when Tom stopped to help Myrtle after she was hit by a passing car. This encounter eventually grew into an affair between the two characters.
"Incredulous" does not appear in the first chapter of "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Tom breaks Myrtles nose because she would not stop chanting Daisys name. Tom got furious because Myrtle would not stop, after he had told her to stop.
The Great Gatsby is told from a first person point of view. We read the story through the eyes of Nick Carraway.
The First Chapter