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A real page turner. Read it in about two sittings. The exhaustive story of the famous novel and many players in its life to date. It is very well written with balance and objectivity. Plenty of quotes to prove all assertions, it is nonetheless very protective of the author, despite a form of what sounds like agoraphobia. The book documents how novices can be like lambs in the den. It also shows how karma tends to even the score. The racial issues of the classic do not escape the story, nor does the South's misplaced reverence of their failed and evil culture. I was relieved to see an author's quote about Scarlett's personality.
 
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DonaldPowell | 27 altre recensioni | Feb 5, 2019 |
Excellent work about the life of the novel and author.
 
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JeffreyMarks | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 11, 2013 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This book was amazing! I wished I wouldn't have waited so long to read it. This is the engrossing story of how a national bestseller was made. I adore Gone With the Wind, and I found the process of how it was created enthralling. I never would have guessed that a book about the publishing and management of a book's copyright could keep me up until 3 in the morning. Margaret Mitchell created an American classic in Gone With the Wind, a book that if not everyone has read, most nearly everyone knows the reference or has seen the film. Mitchell did not publish any other books, and after reading this I understand why.

Margaret Mitchell wanted desperately to remain a private person in the midst of a bestselling juggernaut. She and her husband went to great lengths to insure her privacy and the protection of her literary masterpiece. Having unwillingly been thrust into the public spotlight at one time myself, I felt a great empathy and kinship with the Margaret Mitchell of this book. She and her husband suffered poor health, yet were the subject of gossip, intellectual theft, and the machinations of greedy people through the wonderful story she created.

One of the aspects of the book I found particularly intriguing was the problems of international copyright - especially during World War II. I was troubled by how little an author's intellectual property is respected in other countries. Mitchell and her husband's efforts to protect her novel were fascinating, yet troubling. I've seen some foreign covers for famous books which appear to be poorly made and the cover having absolutely nothing to do with the novel, and it all makes sense after reading this book. She and her husband were definitely ahead of their time in trying to protect their property.

Mitchell also was ahead of her time when fighting for quality printing. She fought for better bindings and paper on several occasions. I find this admirable, being a book collector myself. Granted, she had the clout to do so, but this is a very pressing problem. I imagine many don't see it since we apparently are supposed to read only e-books, but I adore the paper book for many reasons and for a play on a famous Charlton Heston quote "you have to pry it from my cold, dead hands."

Having not heard of Mitchell's tragic end and the fallout from it, I found it particularly distressing after I felt so much a part of their world during the reading of this book. After Mitchell and her husband's deaths, the path of the rights of the novel was fascinating and disturbing at the same time. The quest for a sequel and commercialization were fairly recent additions to the Gone With the Wind story. I read Alexandra Ripley's Scarlett, which I found out of character with the original book and coarse. I couldn't bring myself to read Rhett's People, having been so disappointed with Scarlett. The rights were supposed to travel through the family, but Mitchell's brother gave them to his law partners. In the past 20 years or so, Gone With the Wind has been so highly commercialized, I find it sad. Mitchell clearly did not want sequels or film adaptations, yet that is clearly what the estate is doing today. They seem more interested in making money than protecting the story Margaret Mitchell and her husband fought so hard for so many years to protect.

I found this book a wonderful tale of a surprise bestseller as well as a tale about what happens to someone who becomes an unwitting celebrity. Brown and Wiley created a very readable book that was very well researched and plotted out to perfection. I was drawn into Mitchell's world and followed her along the path from relative unknown reporter to superstar author. This is the best book I've read in a while, and I never thought I would find such delight in a book about a book. This one is definitely staying in my library, for it is a fascinating tale of love, money, war, and intrigue. What more could you ask from a classic American success story?
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mandymarie20 | 27 altre recensioni | Feb 23, 2013 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
One of my favorite books (and favorite movies) is Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind. I’m not alone in my opinion, it seems - GWTW is thought to be one of the ten most widely read books in the world, right up there with The Bible and Harry Potter and The DaVinci Code.

It’s hard to believe that such a popular book was the author’s first and only novel, but as Ellen Brown and John Wiley Jr. explain in their new book – which is not so much a biography of Mitchell as of GWTW itself – the instant bestseller proved to be such a behemoth that it dominated Mitchell’s time and energy for decades. From the beginning, Mitchell was under pressure; her manuscript was in disarray and it very nearly missed its publication date. A brilliant marketing campaign by Macmillan, her American publisher, created an insatiable demand for GWTW. The book’s popularity was on a scale unprecedented in the industry, but with critical acclaim came voracious fans and never-ending requests for Mitchell’s time. Worse still, copyright protection laws for American authors in foreign countries were weak or nonexistent, and Mitchell and her family (first her husband and later her brother, too) constantly fought to protect the author’s work.

This book is fascinating. Although I knew that I liked GWTW, I never realized the huge impact the book had on how books are marketed and distributed. The Mitchell Estate has been a powerhouse in protecting the rights of authors both in America and overseas, whether they were chasing down rogue publishers printing pirated copies of the novel or stopping the production of unauthorized sequels and merchandise. GWTW is not just a novel, it’s an entire industry – and I had no idea.

Reading about Margaret Mitchell’s life after the novel was released really highlights the American obsession with celebrity. She disliked public speaking, and absolutely refused to go on speaking tours or make public speeches. (Can you imagine a first-time author refusing such publicity today?) She had great respect for her fans, and endeavored to answer each letter she received (sometimes dozens or hundreds each day) – if anyone wants to know why a second novel never appeared, I’d blame the mountain of correspondence. Although some of her choices might come across as ungrateful – at one point she decided that she would cease to sign books, and stuck to the decision for the rest of her life – the book also reveals just how detrimental the attention was to her health, and how completely her story took over both her life and her husband’s.

But I found the second half of the book even more interesting. It covers the history of GWTW after Mitchell’s death, when management of the Mitchell Estate passed to her husband, her brother, and ultimately to a group of lawyers who continue to defend the work today. The book has never gone out of print, largely to the careful management and marketing that continues today. I’m left wondering if the book would have experienced the same longevity and success if the movie hadn’t been such a hit. If the author hadn’t worked so vigilantly to protect the book in overseas market, would the copyright laws be in their present state or would they still be as weak as they were in the 1930s-50s?

It feels strange to call this the “biography of a book” but that’s essentially what Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind is. If you’re a fan of the original novel, or if you’re interested in the publishing world, it’s a fascinating study of one book’s impact on an author’s life, on an industry, and on the world.
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k00kaburra | 27 altre recensioni | Dec 30, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I have finally gotten back to this interesting biography of the book and the entire GWTW story from the very begining. It makes me want to watch the movie again and read the original novel. I didn't know much about Margaret Mitchell before reading this book, but I have gained insight into how writing a best seller impacted her life; somewhat sad, in this case. Margaret Mitchell was a contemporay of my mothers, the same age group. I still remember my mom telling me about going to see the movie when it first came to the screen. The reader will find the biography of GWTW to be very interesting and knowledgeable.
 
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JaneAustenNut | 27 altre recensioni | Nov 20, 2012 |
I am a huge fan of Gone With the Wind (hereinafter referred to as "GWTW") and that is putting it lightly. Once I heard about this book I knew that I had to read it. I loved that this book wasn't merely a biography of Margaret Mitchell yet a biography of GWTW itself. From the beginning when Mitchell first started writing the book until now, it covers everything to do with the book. Some reviewers mentioned that they found some parts about the copyright laws a bit dry but I found it fascinating. Maybe that is just because I love reading about the law and different legal topics though.

This is definitely a quintessential book to read for fans of both the book and the movie.
 
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dpappas | 27 altre recensioni | Oct 27, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A very unusual, and interesting book. It's essentially a biography of the Gone With the Wind story. I really didn't know much about Margaret Mitchell before reading this, but I know a bit more about her now, and quite a bit more about the impacts on an author of writing a best seller; very sad, in this case. The book is very engaging, despite the obviously extensive research that went into writing this book, it reads much like a novel.½
 
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Christiana5 | 27 altre recensioni | Sep 17, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Margaret Mitchell was reluctant to grasp the stardom that came with the writing of Gone With the Wind. She was an extremely private person; it was questionable at the time if she would attend many of the promotions for the book and movie. Mitchell was raised in the era where children were seen and not heard. Mitchell took this opportunity to listen. She heard many stories about the war between the states and her ideas started to form. I think it is so funny that in the first drafting of GWTW, Mitchell had named Scarlett, Pansy. Imagine Vivian Leigh embracing a character named Pansy. Thank goodness Mitchell changed it to Scarlett. I feel the book got bogged down a bit at times with information, but for any fan of GWTW this is a fabulous read. There is so much more to Mitchell than just being the author who wrote this great classic. She spent much time putting together care packages for overseas readers and publishers during WWII. These are the interesting facts that come out in this book. The fact that GWTW has stood the test of time, five decades, speaks volumes about the talent of it's author.
 
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bnbookgirl | 27 altre recensioni | Sep 10, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Margaret Mitchell's work is one of the great American novels, and was written by an intensely private woman. This book meticulously tracks how Mitchell's idea became one of the greatest successes in publishing, as well as providing a fascinating look at the publishing industry and copyright. The authors did an outstanding job of combing through an enormous amount of primary sources to present the complete picture of the author and her work. I'm a huge fan of GWTW, both in print and movie form, so I was eager to read this book, but because of the sheer amount of detail, I'm not sure how much appeal it will have to the casual reader.½
 
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kqueue | 27 altre recensioni | Aug 22, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Margaret Mitchell (1900-1949) grew up in Atlanta, listening to older folks telling stories of the Civil War (1861-1865). While recuperating from an ankle injury in 1926 that largely confined her to her home, Mitchell began writing a novel set in Georgia during the 1860s and 1870s that drew upon the tales she had heard as a child. In her mind, she mapped out the complete story and, using a technique she had learned as a newspaper reporter, began writing from the end.

Mitchell's book, of course, developed into Gone With the Wind. Macmillan published it in 1936, and the lives of its author and her husband, John Marsh, were never the same. GWTW enjoyed unprecedented success, and the Marshes found themselves plowing new territory as they, along with Margaret's brother, attorney Stephens Mitchell, negotiated movie contracts, licensing agreements, and foreign rights. The last of these proved to be especially vexing, especially in light of the complications caused by World War II. Macmillan could not be relied upon for help; indeed, relations with the company seemed at times to border on another civil war. In addition to the all-encompassing task of ensuring that her literary rights were respected, Mitchell had to contend with a flood of fans who wanted autographs, mementoes, and money. A reason why she never wrote another book was that she couldn't endure it again.

Ellen F. Brown and John Wiley have done an admirable job of telling the GWTW story. Their extensive research draws upon Mitchell's papers, private collections, and interviews, brought together in an engaging style that keeps readers turning the pages. GWTW enthusiasts will enjoy reading its "biography," but this book's value goes beyond GWTW to chronicle the evolution of authors' rights and to present a revealing look at mid-twentieth-century publishing. A very enjoyable and enlightening book; highly recommended.½
 
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Fjumonvi | 27 altre recensioni | Aug 18, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
If you're a fan of Gone with the Wind - book or movie - this is a great book to read. I thought Margaret Mitchell was quite a southern diva! The authors did a great job with their research considering how private MM was and how her executors followed the wishes of her and her husband.
The story follows the book from envelopes full of pages right through to present day. In between is the relationship between the Marshes and McMillan Publishing and David Selznick. Even the publishing process was pretty interesting.
A great read.
 
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NancyJak | 27 altre recensioni | Aug 14, 2012 |
This well researched book details Mitchell's sale of the book and the consequences of her fame. However, most interesting is the constant legal struggles she had to protect her copyright. The authors have done an excellent job of research and presented many details unknown even to hard core Windies. Their writing style makes you not want to put the book down and is as exciting as Gone With the Wind itself is!
 
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knahs | 27 altre recensioni | Aug 7, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I first knew about “Gone With the Wind” from hearing about the movie. In the late 1960s, (when I was 14), the film was re-released, and I saw it in a local theatre, on the wide screen. I was so taken with the film, I had to read the book, and purchased a paperback copy for a (then) whopping $1.25, and could not put it down. Since then, I’ve seen the movie twice on the big screen, numerous times on TV and DVD, and delightedly inherited a 1938 edition of the book from a great-aunt, which I read twice. In 2002, I visited Atlanta for a family wedding and stayed at the Georgian Terrace Hotel, where several social functions were held for the 1939 premiere of the filmed version of “GWTW”, and visited the Margaret Mitchell house where she wrote the novel.

That said, I was thrilled to be selected by Library Thing to get a review copy of “Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind: A Bestseller’s Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood”. This incredibly well researched book is a fascinating read for anyone who is a fan of the novel or the film, or anyone in the publishing world. It tells us the story of what is perhaps the most famous great American epic novel, from conception to afterlife.

The authors introduce us to Margaret Mitchell – a gentle Southerner who never wanted all the attention and acclaim she received from her one and only work of literature. She wrote the book over a period of several years, the various chapters haphazardly stacked in manila envelopes all over her tiny residence.

She was urged by a friend, Lois Cole, who worked for Macmillan Publishing, to send the manuscript to Macmillan, and the publisher realized they had gold on their hands. From there, Margaret Mitchell’s life (and that of her husband, John Marsh) was forever changed.

This book is filled with nuggets of information and details about every step in the life of GWTW. What was most surprising to me was the reluctance of Ms. Mitchell to participate in so many events surrounding the publication of GWTW, which was the most highly anticipated novel in years. Conversely, after the publication, she maintained a private persona, but answered every fan letter, signed hundreds of copies of the book that were sent to her home for signature, and was stopped constantly by fans all over Atlanta as she went about her daily life.

The book also gives us insight into the intricate and convoluted web of contracts and ensuing lawsuits that were to plague Margaret Mitchell, starting with the movie rights. Naively, Mitchell and Marsh allowed Macmillan to broker the deal with David O. Selznick rather than get involved with an agent who would have most likely gotten them a lot more money than the $50,000 they received. It was also of interest to note that at times, it seemed like Macmillan shirked some responsibility, most notably allowing Mitchell to navigate the shark infested waters of foreign copyrights and royalties by herself. They had lawsuits over piracy, royalties and copyrights in various parts of the world at any given time for a period of many years. After World War II, the Marshes were to discover that the agent they believed in had embezzled more than $30,000 of royalties from them.

“Gone With the Wind” lives on. After Mitchell’s untimely death in 1949, her literary estate passed to her husband John Marsh, and eventually to her brother, Stephens Mitchell, who was also her attorney. Her estate carefully protects Scarlett, Rhett, and “Gone With the Wind”, some 75 years after its publication.

This engrossing, well written book proves that “Gone With the Wind” still fascinates the public, and will continue to do so for generations to come.
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chrisac | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 22, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A biography of a book? Absolutely. Ellen Brown and John Wiley Jr have written a fast-paced, totally intriguing, full-of-life tome on the birth and life of Margaret Mitchell's GONE WITH THE WIND. Their excellent research into Mitchell and her husband's communications with MacMillan Publishing have produced a book that is sure to fly its way into the charts. There is nothing dry or boring about Brown and Wiley's work. They are superb writers capable of taking an unlikely subject and writing about it in a way that draws the reader in the same way a particularly well-crafted mystery might.

One learns a great deal about the publishing industry in the United States in the 1930s, foreign copyrights (which may sound boring but will actually hold the reader's interest), and the pain of becoming famous overnight. One empathizes with Margaret Mitchell who yearned for a quiet life in her native South, but who was thrust into the national spotlight almost overnight - and this in the days before cable TV and internet! Brown and Wiley's book - although only secondarily examining the effect of fame on someone who was not prepared for it - certainly makes us reflect on the dangers of suddenly becoming a household name.

One of the notables aspects of this book is that the reader may find that there are not a lot of likeable characters among this real-life cast. Mitchell seems like a polite Southern lady on the surface, but her way of dealing with the reality of her new life and the publishing world may make a few readers throw up their hands. Particularly uncomfortable are the control issues exhibited by John Marsh, Mitchell's husband. Although some may view it as sweet that a husband would go to such extents to protect his wife, others will raise eyebrows at the extent Marsh went to control issues far beyond what he could actually dictate.

The crew at MacMillian - Unconcerned? Incompetent? Always on vacation? There are questions raised on every page - and often answered - about the way the publishing industry went about business in the 1930s. Brown and Wiley manage to write about the tightrope between pleasing the author and making money in such a way that we feel we are crossing that tightrope as we read about their daily concerns. It is difficult to imagine that anyone has written a book that exposes the publishing industry in quite this way.

Mitchell's brother? David O. Selznick? Marion Saunders, the foreign rights' agent? Not one of these real-life characters seems very likeable. Of course, this isn't a book about participants in a personality contest. It reads more like a competition for the right to be deemed the biggest devil.

All of these weird personalities make fascinating reading, however, and Brown and Wiley's book is much better reading than half of what is on the market at the moment. Read it for a close-up look at the publishing industry, for insight into the effects of sudden fame, to understand more about the American South and manners in society, and for an introduction to a large cast of fascinating - although ultimately dislikable - people.

With the exception of Margaret Baugh, Mitchell's long-time secretary and Bessie Jackson, her housekeeper, it appears that there are not many people who appear in this book as likeable. That said, the book is FABULOUS. Read it. The journey is incredible. Who ever thought the biography of a book could be so compelling?½
 
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IsolaBlue | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 19, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I was ignorant at the beginning of this book of anything about Mitchell except her being an author. I was very interested and surprised to read about a strong "Career Girl" who started out in journalism. I appreciated the detail about the changes the book brought to her life, in avoiding publicity, struggling with contracts and requirements, and defending her work. I very much enjoyed this book and highly recommend it to anyone who has any interest in what happens after a book is published. I appreciated the view into both the publishing world, and the demands of the press and the public.
 
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dhelmen | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 16, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Going into reading this book I knew virtually nil about Margaret Mitchell other than she wrote Gone With the Wind. Having just read Gone With the Wind last month, and loving it of course, this was a fabulous read to learn more about what it took to get the book published and the award winning movie made. The work that Mitchell put into her book is amazing and the fact that she stood by it even when it invaded her life, shows a lot about Mitchell's character. This biography of details Mitchell and all the people who worked hard on getting her novel published, making the movie an instant blockbuster and fighting off fame, fortune and copyright issues in a publishing world where copyright laws were nothing like they are today. I found this book to be a fabulous read and entertaining and learned so much about one of my favorite novels and movies. The research that went into this novel shows that the authors really spent a lot of time to make sure the facts were right and that they portrayed ll the major players as close to the truth. If you are a Gone with the Wind lover, whether it be the book or the movie, then I highly encourage you to read this book to learn so much more than appears on just the surface.
 
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lilkim714 | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 14, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I can't say I'm the biggest Gone With the Wind fan ever, but I'm certainly fascinated by the novel. I've read it three times since the age of fourteen, and it's quite rivetting.

This book gives in full detail Gone With the Wind's early beginnings and the multitude of grief it brought to its author bringing it to life. Margaret Mitchell created a monster of sorts that, while providing her with financial security, also caused a lot of heartaches and headaches. With the help of her husband and lawyer-brother, the publicity-shy Mitchell forges ahead and faces a multitude of problems with foreign publication rights, movie rights, embezzlement, neglectful editors and publishers, and overzealous fans.

Wonderfully written and reader friendly, the writers can bog you down with too many details, but the book itself is a treat for those who have enjoyed one of the best-loved novels in the twentieth century and beyond.
 
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quillmenow | 27 altre recensioni | Jan 10, 2012 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
The over-wrought saga of producer David O. Selznick bringing “Gone with the Wind” to the screen has been told in books and movies, particularly the nation-wide search for an actress to play the irrepressible Scarlett O’Hara. Famously, the movie began shooting even before Vivien Leigh was cast as the heroine. Now Ellen Brown and John Wiley offer a book that shows the creation of the novel and protection of it over the years is an even more involved tale in “Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind: A Bestseller’s Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood.”

Drawn from existing research and from the author’s extensive collection of letters, many never before seen outside the family, the work paints an engrossing portrait of Mitchell. Short of stature, but full of personality, the fledgling novelist was an insecure writer, convinced that her manuscript was unworthy of attention. Indeed, the description of Mitchell’s writing process, with bundles and envelopes of various chapters stacked throughout her apartment, accumulating over the years, suggest that publication in any form was a minor miracle.

After the project was discovered by editors at Macmillan through a personal friend of Mitchell’s who worked for the publishing house, there was a lengthy and careful negotiation, convincing Mitchell and her husband John Marsh that the book should be published, and helping them through the process of finishing and editing the manuscript. In fact, the business aspect of the novel cannot be underestimated; this process of negotiating with publishers, including dozens overseas, over issues of royalties and copyright would dominate the rest of Mitchell’s life and her estate for decades.

In the hands of lesser authors, the extended saga of overseas publication and copyright protection could be bland, if not completely unreadable. Instead, the complications, including the disruptions caused by World War II, coupled with the enormous success of the novel around the world offer insight into the strong-willed Mitchell, who with her husband was personally involved in these business matters over the years.

In many ways, the success of the novel (and then the Hollywood adaptation) was far beyond anyone’s dreams for the material, bringing as many complications as opportunities. Unlike many authors eager to gain celebrity status – either to sell more books or to gratify their own egos, or both – Mitchell consistently avoided the limelight. Despite the advance publicity for the novel and film, the author made only a handful of promotional appearances and gave only a couple of interviews. Often, Mitchell’s desire for privacy was as much a burden as if she had participated actively in promoting her book.

After Mitchell’s untimely death, the story of the novel continued, with rights transferring first to Marsh and then to Mitchell’s brother Stephens, who made the decision to finally authorize a sequel – something Margaret Mitchell staunchly refused to do throughout her life.

Overall, the book is surprising and engrossing, an unexpected page-turner about the award-winning novel that many feel is one of the great books of all time. In this history, authors Brown and Wiley discover a character as compelling as the feisty Scarlett O’Hara in the courteous, insecure, and tough as nails Margaret Mitchell.½
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ALincolnNut | 27 altre recensioni | Aug 29, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind

by Ellen F. Brown and John Wiley, Jr.

This book subtitled A Bestseller’s Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood is all that is described in the subtitle and so much more. It is an odyssey for the reader through the trials and many tribulations of the publishing world of the late 1930s and onward. An odyssey involved with the non-romantic world of Hollywood in the same era.

The book basically is a chronicle of the publication of Gone With the Wind, and the problems that a gargantuan bestseller can cause. Margaret Mitchell was not a recluse by any means, but she did value her privacy. The book chronicles her fight to preserve her privacy and still achieve what was hers. In the early chapters of the book the reader is shown that Mitchell disliked the tradition aspects of author/publisher relationship as well as the author/public relationship.

The reader will be amazed at the continual ineptitude, duplicity and the capacity to ignore that her publisher exhibited concerning the author.
One aspect of Mitchell’s relationship with the publication with Gone with the Wind which was on going was the book’s publication in other countries.
The responsibility for preserving the copyrights and collecting royalties in these countries was almost solely hers. The reader is introduced to international copyright laws which varied from country to country and were often nonexistent. The unset of World War II made Mitchell’s task difficult to the point of impossible.

Mitchell refused to have anything to do with the production of the movie. On a lighter note the author’s describe the Atlanta premiere of the movie with all its trappings and Mitchell’s involvement with it.

The book continues on with Mitchell’s heirs and their continuation of her struggles with copyrights and royalties until the present.

The book is in a sense a limited autobiography of Margaret Mitchell and can be read as such, but for the GWTW lover it is the story of the book and how it controlled Mitchell’s life.
 
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biblio99 | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 14, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I never thought a biography would be so easy and intriging to read. The descriptions were just enough that at times I could actually envision the pieces of the manuscript scattered throughout the house; envelopes everywhere. Just like the Gone With The Wind book, this is one I will read over and over.
 
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kaylynvh | 27 altre recensioni | Jul 5, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I’ve never read a book about a book before. Instead of writing another biography of Mitchell or the making of the movie, the authors have created a nonfiction account of the making of a book. It discusses everything from the writing process to the publisher’s correspondence to selling the movie rights and defending the copyright.

I feel like this book should have been titled “Don’t Ever Write a Book If You’re An Introvert.” Poor Margaret Mitchell spent years crafting Gone With the Wind, only to discover that when it was finally finished her headaches had just begun. This book chronicles the decades of back and forth between the author and her publisher, literary agent, fans, movie producers, etc.

From the moment Mitchell handed the first scattered chapters over to the publisher, her privacy and free time seemed to be “gone with the wind” (sorry, I couldn’t help myself). Mitchell’s husband worked with her to manage all of the contracts/letters/lawsuits that went hand-in-hand with her success. It was amazing how one book, even a wonderful one like GWTW, could create such an avalanche of both money and stress.

The fact that the book’s success came in the midst of the Great Depression is a testament to its overwhelming popularity. People were willing to pay $3 for a copy, a huge sum at that time. The fact that America joined WWII only a few years after GWTW’s publication also had a big effect on foreign translations and distribution. Hitler even banned the book because his regime didn’t want people reading a story about strong characters surviving during a horrible war.

**SPOILERS ALERT**

I had no idea that Mitchell was hit by a car and died only 13 years after her book was published. I was completely shocked by that. I wonder what other books she might have written if she’d had a longer life.

**SPOILERS OVER**

It is a fascinating read, but I don’t think it would be for anyone who doesn’t either love Gone With the Wind or have a deep desire to get a behind the scenes look at the publishing world. As someone who loved GWTW, I enjoyed the book, but I felt it was bogged down with too much minutia in the middle. But it definitely make me want to re-read the original story again and gave me a deeper appreciation of the phenomenon that was (and is) Gone With the Wind.½
 
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bookworm12 | 27 altre recensioni | Jun 2, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
As a nearly life-long fan of Gone With the Wind in both novel and film form, I was thrilled to find a book detailing the genesis of this great work. Happily, this book definitely did not disappoint. I have an even deeper respect for Margaret Mitchell now that I know the challenges she faced in the process of bringing this story to generations of fans.
 
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sstaheli | 27 altre recensioni | May 19, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
If you are looking for the story behind Rhett, Scarlett, and the rest of the characters in "Gone With The Wind" or a biography of Margaret Mitchell, you won't find it in this book. Instead you'll read about the arduous, life-consuming, and frustrating journey to get "GWTW" on paper (and eventually film) and, after all of that, to preserve the copyrights and publishing rights right up to this very day and on into the future. Margaret Mitchell was simply intent on writing stories she heard as a child from her family about the Civil War, which had ended a mere 35 years before she was born. Without the persistence of Lois Dwight Cole Taylor, a co-workers wife (who happened to work for Macmillan Publishing), "GWTW" may never have found its way from a disorganized collection of "chapters" into perhaps one of the most famous and beloved books ever written.

For those of you who have read "GWTW" (and if you haven't, you really, really should) you may imagine the author to be a demure Southern lady who produced this magnum opus after a 10-year labor of love. Instead, writing, oddly enough, was laborious and something she really didn't enjoy. She felt that nothing she had written was worth anyones time and effort. We also find out that she was by turns tenacious, stubborn, witty, and business-savvy. The hodge-podge of stories, each in its own envelope stashed around the tiny apartment she shared with her second husband, took many months of rewrites and editing to end up a cohesive novel. Indeed, Mitchell was beset by almost debilitating doubt that the book was any good at all and struggled mightily through the rewrite process. The book showed signs of something great, but had no working title ("Bugles Sang True" was one of the options), defined characters (Scarlett was originally named Pansy), or beginning chapter. Once it all started to come together, she was loath to get involved with the promotional aspects of a book that had become a best-seller practically before it hit the bookstores. Her publishing company was so sure of its success they began promoting it and selling the book at the then unheard of high price of $3.00. Once the process began to gather full steam and with the help of Macmillan and her husband, John Marsh, she became quite the expert on foreign rights, copyrights, royalties, and the 'art of the deal'. In fact, she was instrumental in paving the way for authors in the future to preserve overseas publishing rights.

The authors, Ellen F. Brown and John Wiley, Jr., have amassed an incredibly detailed account of every step along the way, as the subtitle states, "...from Atlanta to Hollywood", by the use of "unprecedented access" to letters, contracts, and interviews of those involved. Mitchell had a vast array of assistance from her publishing house, foreign rights agents (including one who should have gone to jail for her actions), attorneys, critics, family, and friends. The amount of information provided from these sources and others can be a bit overwhelming and, to a small extent, tedious. However, that shouldn't exclude those who aren't familiar with the "GWTW" from enjoying the book; it is a tale both captivating and cautionary. Those who pine to write the Next Great American Novel would benefit from this inside look at what it takes to bring the book from the writers' imagination to the bestseller list. While the process today may be more fine tuned, it nonetheless must be overwhelming.

Unfortunately, due to her untimely death in 1949, we'll never know if she would have written a sequel or acted on her notes and studies on other topics. It goes without saying, however, that she probably would not have written another book quite as spectacular as "Gone With the Wind". And, after reading "Margaret Mitchell's Gone With The Wind: A Bestseller's Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood", she may not have been up to the struggles and effort she went through the first time around.
 
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TheFlamingoReads | 27 altre recensioni | Apr 29, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I have been a HUGE fan of GWTW for over half my life, both the novel and the movie. As much as I love the novel and its author, Margaret Mitchell, I didn't really know very much about the history of either. Of course, I've watched all the DVD extras, and I read Lost Laysen and Vivien Leigh's biography (I'm generally not a fan of non-fiction). But happily, much of the information presented in this book was new to me. Ellen F. Brown and John Wiley, Jr. were very meticulous in their research. I was fascinated by the publishing side of GWTW - the way copyright laws were different 70 years ago, how GWTW was advertised and promoted by booksellers, the challenge of publishing overseas, particularly during WWII. As a bookseller, I loved learning about the book Gone With The Wind, not just the story of it, or Margaret Mitchell herself (although, of course, that was included, too). There are so many direct quotes from all of the people involved in GWTW's history in this book, which really made it come alive for me. I loved all the excerpts from letters! One of my favorites was from a Hungarian fan: "Again I don't know how you eat your grapefruit, peeled or just cut in half? If you pour maraschino over it or if you are afraid of gaining weight?" (pg. 169) I am amazed by just how much research Brown and Wiley had to have done in order to write this book! It is a wealth of information! Reading what Margaret Mitchell wrote in her letters was wonderful; she was such an interesting woman. I'm sure I would have been one of those fans in the 30's and 40's who wrote to her! I've read some reviews of this book that say there are too many small details, that readers aren't interested in old contract negotiations, that Margaret Mitchell, having only written one book in her life, doesn't warrant a 300 page book about her and that novel. I disagree with them. Yes, only true fans of Gone With The Wind (and possibly those interested in the history of publishing and copyright laws) will be interested in reading this book. But that is for whom it was written. It is very thorough and minutely detailed, and I think it will be the standard for GWTW history in years to come.
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jenreidreads | 27 altre recensioni | Apr 15, 2011 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This is a detailed, carefully researched history of the book, Gone with the Wind, published to coincide with the 75th anniversary of its original publication. It is primarily the story of the writing of the book, getting it published, and managing the literary rights of the book, first by and for Margaret Mitchell herself and later for her estate. The narrative includes the arrangement and maintenance of the movie rights and the literary rights concerning the publication of the book in many foreign countries and in many languages. Included are the efforts to have the royalties from various editions paid. The narrative covers other forms of artistic expression based on the book including comic strips, dramas, and musicals, and of altering the story through sequels or spoofs.

Although the book covers from the beginning of Margaret Mitchell’s life through the present (2011), it could also be considered the story of Margaret Mitchell and her husband and business manager, John Marsh, specifically in relation to the book. Margaret Mitchell had worked on writing the novel for nearly ten years when she finally submitted the manuscript to Macmillan at the request of Lois Dwight Cole and Harold Latham in 1935; she gave many envelopes of manuscript directly to Mr. Latham on one of his scouting trips. The manuscript was in no way ready for a quick publication; once it was accepted, Margaret, assisted by her husband, worked feverishly to prepare the story for publication.

Margaret Mitchell did not want to be involved with promoting her book. She did not go on any book tours, and gave very few speeches. However, she willingly answered mail from readers. She was opposed to writing a sequel; she was satisfied with the way the novel ended (p. 226). Margaret’s career following publication of the novel was chiefly devoted to taking care of the literary rights of her book, once again with the help of her husband. However, throughout the 1940s she jotted down notes and ideas for stories (p.259).

Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind is written chronologically. Each chapter heading is followed by the time period covered. This means that different topics are covered in each chapter rather than having one a chapter devoted only to foreign rights in a particular country.
 
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sallylou61 | 27 altre recensioni | Apr 11, 2011 |