George Wilson's wife, Tom Buchanan's mistress--
Daisy hits Myrtle Wilson with a car in The Great Gatsby. Daisy is driving Gatsby's car when the accident occurs.
George Wilson is the Husband of Myrtle Wilson.
Myrtle Wilson was in her early thirties when she was killed in The Great 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 the Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson's hometown is called The Valley of Ashes. The Great Gatsby was written by Scott Fitzgerald.
George Wilson is the Husband of Myrtle Wilson.
Myrtle and George Wilson were married for 12 years in "The Great Gatsby."
Tom's mistress in "The Great Gatsby" is Myrtle Wilson, the wife of George Wilson. She carries on an adulterous relationship with Tom Buchanan, one of the main characters in the novel.
Myrtle Wilson is the mistress of Tom Buchanan, who is one of the main characters in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby." She is married to George Wilson, the owner of a garage in the Valley of Ashes. Myrtle is portrayed as materialistic and seeking a higher social status, which ultimately leads to her tragic demise.
In the Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson's hometown is called The Valley of Ashes. The Great Gatsby was written by Scott Fitzgerald.
Myrtle Wilson is a character in "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald. She is Tom Buchanan's mistress and is married to George Wilson, the owner of a garage in the Valley of Ashes. Myrtle is portrayed as materialistic and ambitious, with a desire to escape her lower-class life.
Myrtle Wilson did not go to school in "The Great Gatsby" as her character is portrayed as a working-class woman married to George Wilson who runs a garage in the Valley of Ashes. There is no mention of her attending school in the novel.