Gone With the Wind

Hardcover, 823 pages

English language

Published Jan. 9, 1991 by MacMillan.

OCLC Number:
35318881

View on OpenLibrary

(23 reviews)

On the 60th anniversary of the first publication of Gone With the Wind, Macmillan General Books are proud to be publishing this new edition of the world's most famous novel.

Set against the dramatic backdrop of the American Civil War, Margaret Mitchell's magnificent historical epic is an unforgettable tale of love and loss, of a nation mortally divided and a people forever changed. Above all, it is the story of beautiful, ruthless Scarlett O'Hara and the dashing soldier of fortune, Rhett Butler.

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize with over 30 million copies sold worldwide, on its 60th birthday, Gone With The Wind endures as a story for all our times. --front flap

60 editions

Well, that was a wild ride, wasn't it?

I'm not sure if I was supposed to like Scarlett O'Hara. I definitely DIDN'T like her, but it's such a mammoth book, to spend all that time loathing the main character, I wondered if I was supposed to like her, at least a bit. However, she's so unspeakably selfish, never kind unless she can get something she wants by feigning kindness, and unimaginably dense about what anyone else might be thinking or feeling, never mind why. Dense, but also, utterly disinterested.

I found Rhett Butler a much more interesting character. He shares many of her quirks, but he has vastly greater understanding, compassion and potential for kindness than she does. He's a proper anti-hero - he does terrible things, but also great things, an enigma of a man, whom Scarlett would have done well to study properly, instead of skimming over him as if he was as shallow as she …

Goodreads Review

No rating

Ach, wie viel einfacher wäre es, diese Rezension zu schreiben, wenn der Roman nicht ganz und gar von Rassismus durchsetzt wäre. Aber man kann einfach nicht darüber hinwegsehen. Margaret Mitchell hat Jahrzehnte nach dem amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg quasi ein Manifest geschrieben, das die Sklaverei und den alten Süden verherrlicht und selbst den Ku Klux Klan in ein positives Licht stellt. Gott bewahre, dass jemand diesen Roman für bare Münze nimmt.

Auf der anderen Seite hat mich die Liebesgeschichte um Scarlett und Rhett Butler einfach umgehauen. Fiktionale Männer, die eine Frau mit vollem Herzen lieben und ihr jahrelang hinterherlaufen, sind einfach mein allerliebstes literarisches Motiv. Auch die anderen Figuren im Roman sind extrem gut gezeichnet und ich wurde einfach in die Geschichte hineingezogen. Voll und ganz, mit Haut und Haar habe ich tagelang quasi an Scarletts Seite gelebt und mitgefiebert.

Andere Leute haben hier schon viel bessere Rezensionen geschrieben, die all meine …

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