- emmetkamdenkarlygarrard
-
Kamis, 24 Maret 2011
-
0 Comments
Download Ebook Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell
As known, journey as well as experience concerning driving lesson, enjoyment, as well as understanding can be gained by just reading a book Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell Even it is not straight done, you could recognize more concerning this life, regarding the world. We provide you this proper and also very easy method to get those all. We offer Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell and many book collections from fictions to science in any way. One of them is this Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell that can be your companion.

Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell
Download Ebook Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell
It sounds good when knowing the Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell in this site. This is one of guides that many individuals searching for. In the past, many people ask about this publication as their much-loved publication to read as well as gather. And also currently, we present hat you require swiftly. It appears to be so happy to provide you this famous book. It will certainly not become a unity of the way for you to obtain impressive advantages at all. However, it will certainly offer something that will certainly allow you obtain the most effective time as well as minute to spend for checking out the book.
This is a really reasonable book that must read. The following could offer you the method to get this book. It is in fact alleviate. When the other individuals need to walk and also go outside to obtain the book in the book store, you can simply be by seeing this website. There is given web link that you could find. It will certainly direct you to see the book page and get the Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell Maded with the download as well as get this book, start to read.
Now, you may recognize well that this publication is mostly suggested not just for the viewers who like this subject. This is additionally advertised for all people as well as public kind culture. It will not restrict you to check out or not guide. Yet, when you have started or started to check out DDD, you will certainly recognize why precisely guide will certainly offer you al favorable things.
Making sure, many people also have downloaded and install the soft data of Gone With The Wind, By Margaret Mitchell though this site. Only by clicking link that is given, you could go directly to the book. Once more, this book will certainly be really important for you to review, also they are straightforward, and they will lead you to be the far better life. So, what do you think of this updated book collection? Let's inspect it now as well as prepare yourself to earn this publication as definitely your collection and also analysis products. Think it!
Review
"Fascinating and unforgettable! A remarkable book, a spectacular book, a book that will not be forgotten!" -- "Chicago Tribune""I first read "Gone with the Wind" in grade school--a boy of the upper South who'd seen the great movie and felt compelled to learn what lay behind it, all thousand-plus pages worth. No page disappointed me. What other American novel surpasses its eagerness to tell a great story of love and war; what characters equal the cantankerous passions of Scarlett and Rhett? Even Scott Fitzgerald spoke well of it. What more could I ask, even seven decades later?" -- Reynolds Price"GWTW is an indelible portrait of a unique time and place, American's greatest political and moral conflict, and the myths that surround it -- an all absorbing spectacle of a read even for postmodern readers. Mitchell vividly portrays the disillusionment and devastation of war, the ignorance of the uninitiated, and the transformation of arrogance into tenacity that shaped the first "new South." All the details of history and place come together as a rich backdrop for those unforgettable characters: shallow and selfish Scarlett, sincere Melanie, moony-eyed Ashley, and the sage, pragmatic, dashing, and rakish Rhett Butler--the most enduring heartthrob of American literature has produced. I'd reread the book for the thrill of Rhett alone!" -- Darnell Arnoult, author of "Sufficient Grace""In 1936 I was in E.M. Daggett Junior High in Ft. Worth, Texas. By some chance I was able to read "Gone with the Wind" early on. Then and now, I found it one of the great experiences of a young life. I still list it as one of my 10 favorite books." -- Liz Smith, nationally syndicated columnist"Beyond a doubt one of the most remarkable first novels produced by an American writer. It is also one of the best." -- "The New York Times""Not just a great love story, "Gone with the Wind" is one of the most powerful anti-war novels ever written. Told from the standpoint of the women left behind, author Margaret Mitchell brilliantly illustrates the heartbreaking and devastating effects of war on the land and its people." -- Fannie Flagg, Academy Award nominated-author"The best novel to have ever come out of the South...it is unsurpassed in the whole of American writing." -- "The Washington Post""Let's say you've read "Gone with the Wind" at least twice, and seen the movie over and again. So, here's a thought. Buy this handsome paperback edition, just for Pat Conroy's preface. This passionate, nearly breathless love letter is a Song of Solomon to Margaret Mitchell, Scarlett O'Hara, and Conroy's beautiful, GTW-obsessed mother. Indeed, his luminous preface packs a durable wallop, just like the epic Pulitzer prize-winning work that inspires it." -- Jan Karon, author of "The Mitford Years" series"In my own personal life, I find many similarities to Scarlett's: The whole 17-inch waist thing notwithstanding, I do love a barbecue, both for the food and the men--I have been known to "eat like a field hand and gobble like a hawg"--I admit that at least on one occasion I may have feigned interest in some guy to further my own interests--I have fought tooth, toenail and tirelessly for my family--I learn slow but I learn good--and even so, I still adore the prospect of dealing with most things...Tomorrow." -- Jill Conner Browne, The Sweet Potato Queen, bestselling author of "The Sweet Potato Queens' First Big-Ass Novel"""Gone with the Wind" is one of those rare books that we never forget. We read it when we're young and fall in love with the characters, then we watch the film and read the book again and watch the film again and never get tired of revisiting an era that is the most important in our history. Rhett and Scarlet and Melanie and Ashley and Big Sam and Mammy and Archie the convict are characters who always remain with us, in the same way that Twain's characters do. No one ever forgets the scene when Scarlet wanders among the wounded in the Atlanta train yard; no one ever forgets the moment Melanie and Scarlet drag the body of the dead Federal soldier down the staircase, a step at a time. "Gone with the Wind" is an epic story. Anyone who has not read it has missed one of the greatest literary experiences a reader can have." -- James Lee Burke, bestselling author of "The Tin Roof Blowdown "
Read more
Product details
Hardcover: 1048 pages
Publisher: Scribner (June 1, 1996)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 068483068X
ISBN-13: 978-0684830681
Product Dimensions:
5.5 x 2 x 8.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 2.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.8 out of 5 stars
2,509 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#12,240 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Who would have thought that a 1037-page, 80-year-old novel about a spoiled, petulant teenager in petticoats would completely suck me in, and turn out to be one of the greatest novels of all time?Everything about this book is beyond superlative--vivid characters, settings that live and breathe, but especially Margaret Mitchell's prose. It would be worthwhile for any writer to study her sentences, every one of which flows with living motion, without a single flowery word. The dialogues between Scarlett and Rhett make sparks fly off the pages!One could criticize the liberal use of racially offensive terms and the portrayal of happy slaves, but I would disagree. Within the world so meticulously created by the author, a bygone world, for all its faults, that was seen as being in equilibrium before its downfall, to have done otherwise would have been false.This is truly the Great American Novel, in the top 5 of the greatest books I've ever read, and I suggest that you will thank yourself for reading it. My only regret about finishing Gone With the Wind is that now I can never again read it for the first time.
I bought this book after reading a politically correct rant in a magazine by someone who thought it was high time that the book should be shunned or even banned. In general, I tend to think that anything that people want to ban should be immediately and strongly supported for free speech reasons, if nothing else, but I did not necessarily have high expectations for the book. I assumed it would be a low/middlebrow, well written historical romance, but not much more than that. I was way wrong. Its a great novel on many levels: plot, characterization, narrative flow, and effective advocacy and support for a vanquished way of life (Mitchell does not pretend to be objective; she is fighting a rear guard action to defend the South she loved against the judgment of history; the reason she infuriated liberal critics from the moment the book was published to the present day was because she fought that action so effectively in this book.). Of course, her view of the institution of slavery was disingenuous (at best), but, on the other hand, her bitter attacks on the carpetbaggers and speculators during the reconstruction era certainly ring true. But the politics of the book are not the elements that make it great; it is the portrayal of an era and the way she makes you care about the events, characters, and land that make up Scarlett O'Hara's worldThis novel is the second greatest selling book of all time (the Bible is first), and I can now see why it has maintained its extraordinary popularity for 75 years. That popularity was, and is, well deserved.
Hoo boy, this is a hard one to describe. I should point out that I'm from Atlanta born and raised and read this book multiple times as a kid and LOVED it. But re-reading it as an adult it's really hard to get past the egregious and inescapable racism that permeates it. On the one hand the main story is a good one, well written and well told. Scarlett is a great character, a true female antihero who's complex and maddening and very human. Margaret Mitchell has a gift for characterization and story telling and the writing is generally fantastic.BUTBut it's un-apologetically racist, the characterizations of the non-white parties are cringe-inducing and as a rational adult it's hard to swallow the book's smug assurance that most slaves were happy, that Reconstruction was tyranny and that the white landowners of the antebellum South were the true victims of the Civil War. As a young white bookworm with liberal parents who was anxious to believe that racism and civil rights issues were a thing of the past I was able to forgive these flaws but now in this racially charged day of deep income and racial inequality it's a lot harder to just ignore that side of the novel.On the other hand is it unjustifiably written off as fluff because of its female author in a way that, say, Rudyard Kipling and Mark Twain novels are not? Yes I believe it is. Is it feminist? I think a case can be made for that too. But as for how many stars to give it I need multiple categories. For racism it gets zero stars, for a well told love story that ponders the complexity of female friendships as well as the nature of desire and the ways we lie to ourselves in the name of love it gets five. Beyond that and regarding its place in the literary canon, I am unqualified to say.
Of course this book is still very much an American classic and as exciting a read as in 1935 when it was first published. This is my first time reading it in 30 yr., although I read it several times as a young adult.So many parts of the story that were not particularly as important when I was in my early 20's were glaringly important to me now. Such as the beginnings of the Klu Klux Klan, and why. Also, during the reconstruction, the real differences between "new" money and the old. Learning about the hardships placed on the whites by the National govt.,such as allowing black people to vote and not allowing the whites to do so. Evidently decent people,black and white suffered incredibly.One must also keep in mind that Mrs. Mitchell was also the product of her time, living in Atlanta with her well to do family, and servants who'sparents and grandparents had probably been slaves to her household before the Civil War. It is to her credit that she tries to tell both sides of the story, black and white.This book is so fine, on so many levels, I believe it should be read by just everyonem
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell PDF
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell EPub
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell Doc
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell iBooks
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell rtf
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell Mobipocket
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell Kindle
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell PDF
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell PDF
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell PDF
Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell PDF
Ebooks
0 komentar: