Gone with the wind

39.00

Title: Gone With the Wind (two volumes)

Author: Margaret Mitchell

Translator: Elham Rahmani

Publisher: Atisa

Subject: American stories

Age category: Adult

Cover: Hard

Number of pages: two volumes

Language: Farsi

Qty:
Comparison

Description

Gone with the Wind is the unique work of Margaret Mitchell, an American woman writer. Gone with the Wind is the fiery and adventurous love story of Scarlett O’Hara and Ashley.

Margaret Mitchell won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature for her book Gone With the Wind. The wind-blown film based on this book shone brightly and won many awards.

The beautiful novel Gone With the Wind begins with Scarlett O’Hara expressing her love for Ashley Wilkes. Ashley wants to marry her cousin Melanie Hamilton.
Upon hearing this news, Scarlett decides to express her love for Ashley. Because he thinks Ashley wants to marry Melanie because he is disappointed with her.
Ashley denies Scarlett’s love. Meanwhile, Rat Butler, who is an adventurous and good-looking young man, likes her because of the courage that Scarlett has shown in herself.
Scarlett marries Melanie’s brother Charles but loses him in a war camp. Scarlett goes to Atlanta to be with Melanie, and there she meets Rat Butler, who is now quite rich …

Gone with the Wind is one of the most beautiful romances in the world. This work can attract the attention of all those interested in classical world literature.
Destroyed This Unique Romance Novel, Margaret Mitchell’s masterpiece, is his first and last novel, one of the most beloved books in the world forever.

With over 30 million copies and reprints, it certainly deserves such a title, which well illustrates American politics and thinking.
A girl with an attractive and proud appearance and reckless connection with those around her who has no boundaries to achieve her desires, her life and love are linked to war!

His father is a wealthy southern landowner. The fact that the story begins very soon with the story of Scarlett’s love for Ashley is a strong point of the story, which strikes a strong hook in the reader’s mind and draws her after him.
War, as the plot, is drawn to Scarlett’s love story and her life. The following problems arise from the consequences of war: poverty, fire, death, corruption, the mental problems of human beings.

The author is completely in control of the elements of the story, and this issue is seen in Scarlett’s nightmares throughout the story, and at the end, its mystery is revealed.
Sub-events play a very important role in the credibility of the story. The author has advanced the story well by mastering the management of these sub-events.

The charm and suspense of the story in the scene of Scarlett escaping with Gary is one of the most fascinating parts of the story.
About 140 characters play roles in the novel. In the first chapter, 34 characters enter the novel together. Dealing with each character is well done.

The novel’s unique strength is the dialogue between the characters, which reflects the American way of thinking.

He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1937, and in 1939 became the best-selling book in the world, followed by a film based on the book, which broke the worldwide sales record for a film.
Directed by Victor Fleming and starring Clark Gable and Vivian Lee, the film won the 1940 Academy Awards, when Hattie McDonnell (a black actress) had the only right to sit in the bottom row of the cinema for the supporting role. It was an Oscar that caused a great deal of controversy in American society.
Two people later wrote a sequel to the novel, neither of which was as successful as the original:
1- Relatives of Rat Butler, written by Donald McCage, in three volumes

2. Scarlett, by Alexander Ribley.

About Margaret Mitchell
Margaret Mannerlin Mitchell Marsh was born on November 8, 1900. His childhood was spent in the American Civil War. With the death of his mother, he dropped out of part-time medical school to pursue a career in journalism.

But due to an ankle fracture, he became a homemaker and in 1926 began to write in vain.

The book was published in 1936 and was quickly translated into 16 languages. Margaret Mitchell won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for her writing.
Margaret Mitchell married at the age of 22 but, after realizing her husband’s illegal activities, divorced her and later married another man who was her first husband’s friend. He died on August 16, 1949, in an accident.

Sentences from the book are gone
As the twins left, Scarlett stood on Ivan Tara until the last sound of the horses’ hoofs faded and she returned to her chair like a sleepwalker.

He dried it out of discomfort and laughed so much that he had inadvertently laughed that the twins would not know the secret, his mouth muscles ached. He folded one of his legs and sat down impatiently on a chair.

His heart was full of sorrow, so much so that he felt he could not contain all this sorrow. His heart was pounding, his hands were cold and he was drowning in a sense of misery.
Confusion and confusion are rippling through his face, the confusion of a cuddly child who always had what he wanted and now, for the first time, encounters an unpleasant situation in his life.

Ashley wanted to marry Melanie Hamilton!
Oh, could it have been true! The twins were wrong, and that was another of their funny jokes.

Ashley can not, can not love Melanie and no one can fall in love with a shy skinny girl like Melanie.

Scarlett contemptuously recalled Melanie’s slender childish face and serious heart-shaped face, which looked so ordinary and almost ugly, and it had been months since Ashley had seen her.

Ashley has not been to Atlanta more than twice since last year at Twelve Oak Farm. Not! Ashley could not love Melanie because she knew she was not wrong!
Because Ashley loved her! Ashley just loved Scarlett and she knew it!
Abstract from the text:
On a sunny afternoon in April 1861, Scarlett sat with Stuart and Brent Tarleton in the cool shade of Ivan Tara’s father’s farm, creating a very pleasant scene.

He wore a new t-shirt with twelve yards of china and green wavy green hoops and green Moroccan short heels that his father had just brought him from Atlanta.

His seventeen-inch shirt showed his slim waist, and his perfectly slim top showed his mature sixteen-year-old breasts.

The folds of her skirt were not too far and the cut was not spread. He tied his hair neatly and neatly in a net behind his head and placed his slender, white hands motionless on his legs, all of which, of course, did not reflect his true personality.
The restless, stubborn, and refreshing green eyes of his life, carefully placed in Malih’s faces, seemed utterly inconsistent with that graceful demeanor, though his demeanor stemmed from his mother’s gentle instructions and rigorous upbringing, but his own eyes.

The characters of the story are gone
Scarlett: A bold girl who has fought against tradition. He alone maintains his father’s farm. It is beautiful, although it is not popular among its people.

Rat Butler: She is Scarlett’s third wife. She understands his spirits well and loves him. He is an opportunistic and successful man.

Melanie: Scarlett’s best friend. The ultimate chaste girl that Scarlett loves her husband.

Ashley: She is Melanie’s wife that Scarlett loves. A weak and dependent person.

About the author:
Margaret Mitchell was born on November 8, 1900 in Atalanta, USA. His father was American and his mother Irish, who lived in South America.

He spent his childhood in the years of the American Civil War, and was well acquainted with the atmosphere of that time, and perhaps the details that are strangely palpable in his book (Gone With the Wind) and in Human Relations. Resulting from living in the same circumstances.

She married at the age of 22, but found out about her husband’s illegal activities and later married another person who was her first husband’s friend.
With the death of his mother, he abandoned his part-time medical studies and turned to journalism. But due to a broken ankle, he stayed at home and began writing novels.

The novel that became the best-selling book of the year in the same year of publication (1936) and his name immortalized forever in the world of prominent writers.
A writer who later, in 1937, won the Pulitzer Prize for his novel The Waste. The book that is forever one of the most popular books in the world with more than 28 million copies and has been reprinted many times, definitely deserves such a title.

He spent his childhood in the years of the American Civil War and was well acquainted with the atmosphere of that time.
He knew it, and perhaps the details that are strangely palpable in his book and in human relationships come from living in the same circumstances.
But the synopsis: Scarlett, the eldest daughter of Mitchell, the owner of Tara Cotton Farm, thinks of only one thing; Married to Ashley Wilkes, son of a nearby farm owner.

At a party at Wilkes Scarlett’s house, he expresses interest in Ashley, but Ashley states that he wants to marry his cousin Melanie.

Rat Butler, the handsome adventurer who witnessed the conversation, advises Scarlett. The North and South American War begins and Scarlett marries Charles Brad Melanie, but Charles goes to training camp.

Scarlett goes to Melanie in Atlanta, where she meets Bart Butler again.
When Atlanta is attacked, Rat helps Scarlett and Melanie escape the city and then joins the South.
When Scarlett returns to live with Ashley after the war, Scarlett marries wealthy Frank to maintain the farm.
After Frank’s death, Scarlett married Butler, and the book was published by Venus and made available to the public.
This unique romance novel by Margaret Mitchell is her first and last novel, which is forever one of the most popular books in the world.

With over 30 million copies and reprints, it certainly deserves such a title, which well illustrates American politics and thinking.

He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1937, and in 1939 became the best-selling book in the world, followed by a film based on the book, which broke the worldwide sales record for a film.
Directed by Victor Fleming and starring Clark Gable and Vivian Lee, the film won the 1940 Academy Awards, when Hattie McDonnell (a black actress) had the only right to sit in the bottom row of the cinema. The woman won an Oscar, which caused a lot of protests in American society.

Two people later wrote a sequel to the novel, neither of which was as successful as the original.

Related books

1- Introducing the book  on YouTube

2- Introducing the book  in Aparat

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