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Southern Daughter: The Life of Margaret Mitchell

by Darden Asbury Pyron

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1705162,180 (3.72)5
Explores the life of the author of "Gone With the Wind," tracing the way personal episodes were employed in her fiction, how her knowledge of Southern culture influenced her writing, and many little-known aspects of her career.
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Showing 5 of 5
First edition very fine
  dgmathis | Mar 15, 2023 |
On my visit to Brent and Heidi's in 2007, they took me to the house where Gone with the Wind was written and gave me this book for Christmas. I love Gone with the Wind.
  Gmomaj | Nov 18, 2019 |
The account of Mitchell writing an important section of GWTW in one furious spurt -- in Atlantic City -- is as thrilling as the novel itself. ( )
  BrokenSpines | Dec 1, 2008 |
Southern Daughter is the biographer of Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone with the Wind. I've read GWTW, I think, once when I was 16 or 17 and was fascinated. I tend to get bored by long books and overly long descriptions, but Mitchell had a way of drawing you into her characters and keeping you reading. I've watched the movie a couple of times and the cinematography and art direction is breathtaking and I am a little in love with Rhett Butler. "Southern Daughter" provided great insight into both the writing of the book and the adaptation into a movie, as well as into the author herself.

The biography is comprehensive. While not dwelling too much into the mundane everyday life of Mitchell, it provides enough background on the author and her family to see the connections between GWTW's characters and people in Mitchell's life. Pyron does a good job of analysing the book as Mitchell wrote it, though she does dwell on the "mother-daughter relationship" strain of the book as well as Mitchell's life, which may well be Pyron's take on Mitchell's intention rather than actuality. However, the effects of the movie, the changing political climate and the changes in literary criticism on the reputation of the book have been dealt with comprehensively. Mitchell herself has been described well. From her journalism days to the writing of her book, the significance of letter-writing in her life, her illnesses, publishing and copyright woes, it's all in here.

Highly recommended if you loved GWTW and want to know more about its origins. ( )
  imperfectmanx | Jan 20, 2008 |
DAYAA
  JohnMeeks | Nov 28, 2009 |
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Epigraph
"...and the greatest glory of a woman is to be least talked about by men, whether in praising you or in criticising you." --Thucydides, "Pericles' Funeral Oration", The Peloponnesian Wars II, 46
For I am the first and the last
I am the honored one and the scorned one
I am the whore and the holy one
I am the wife and the virgin...
I am the barren one, and many are her sons...
I am the silence that is incomprehensible...
I am the utterance of my name
--Thundred, Perfect Mind, from Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels (1979)
Dedication
This book is for my darlings, Jane Worrall, Jo Scott, and John Mattison Geer, and for their mother, Marguerite McGee Geer for old time's sake
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Prologue:  Perched in the tall pine trees high in her backyard or ensconced in the tower of her parents' Victorian mansion, the tiny child with the strawberry blonde ringlets and the enormous blue eyes commanded the whole world.
I, Rebels, Patriarchs, and Ladies:  High on the hill, the big house glittered in the brisk November night.
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Explores the life of the author of "Gone With the Wind," tracing the way personal episodes were employed in her fiction, how her knowledge of Southern culture influenced her writing, and many little-known aspects of her career.

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