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Original Title: "Gone with the Wind" Letters
ISBN: 0283995076 (ISBN13: 9780283995071)
Edition Language: English
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Gone with the Wind Letters Audiobook | Pages: 480 pages
Rating: 4.43 | 1015 Users | 51 Reviews

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Title:Gone with the Wind Letters
Author:Margaret Mitchell
Book Format:Audiobook
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 480 pages
Published:August 27th 1987 by Sidgwich Jackson Ltd (first published 1976)
Categories:Nonfiction. Classics. History. Biography

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I remember reading this book in 9th grade and loving it! In fact, unbeknownst to my mother I stayed up all night finishing it. The last hundred pages are very emotional, and not only had I not had any sleep, I was completely enmeshed in the emotions, crying right along with the characters! The only time I ever cursed at my mother was that morning when she asked me, "Hannah Honey, come help with breakfast," to which I replied, "I don't want to come help with any God Damned breakfast!" Guess Rhett and Scarlett were getting to me, huh! I'm rereading it, and this time will be careful not to stay up all night finishing the book!

Rating Based On Books Gone with the Wind Letters
Ratings: 4.43 From 1015 Users | 51 Reviews

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I first read GWTW when I was in the eighth grade and became consumed with it. I loved all things GWTW. I had a life-sized poster of Clark Gable as Rhett in my bedroom for years. I re-read the book several years ago and I think I enjoyed it more as an adult. I was still rapidly turning pages waiting to see if Rhett and Scarlett ended up together.

These letters are fascinating and reveal a humorous, insightful personality of the author of Gone with the Wind. Unfortunately, this edition was published in the 1970s and thus does not include Mitchell's correspondence with Benjamin Mays, nor her correspondence with Hattie McDaniel. Despite this, I loved reading this collection; she writes her letters in the same way she wrote GWTW, creating an invigorating and spirited portrait of Margaret Mitchell that cannot be easily put down. Great read!

Brilliant companion to novel and film. I was excited when I bought it, 75p in a charity shop because it seems a difficult book to obtain nowadays. It was wonderful to have an insight of the writing of the book and observations on the making of the film. I adore this book and is a perfect asset to a GWTW maniac such as myself. I can't believe I considered not buying it. I have no regrets in purchasing such a fine book composed of letters by a woman who has changed my life and written one of my

I'm such a fan of letters. I read this simultaneously with Ellen Brown's book "Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind: A Bestseller's Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood," a great companion to her letters. "So your fan was a Godsend. I practiced fanning myself in the most elegant manner. I also learned how to close it with the most terrific clacking noise. I found this noise most gratifying." pg.62 "Alas, I am the most normal of creatures. Sometimes when I reflect upon this, I realize I can never

I have read this book at least 7 times and thoroughly enjoy it each time. There is more to Scarlett than meets the eye.

Another awesome read. I cried, I laughed, I could not put it down.

Gone With the Wind is a sweeping, romantic story about the American Civil War from the point of view of the Confederacy. In particular it is the story of Scarlett O'Hara, a headstrong Southern belle who survives the hardships of the war and afterwards manages to establish a successful business by capitalizing on the struggle to rebuild the South. Throughout the book she is motivated by her unfulfilled love for Ashley Wilkes, an honorable man who is happily married. After a series of marriages

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