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    <title>Civil_war_era on George&#39;s Blog</title>
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      <title>Gone with the Wind</title>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:32:16 -0500</pubDate>
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      <description>&lt;p&gt;Consistently rated as American&amp;rsquo;s favorite book second only to the Bible, Gone with the Wind has undeniably shaped America&amp;rsquo;s culture and helped serialize the romantic ethos of &amp;lsquo;The South&amp;rsquo;. Written in 1936 it was an instant hit, selling more than a million copies before being turned into arguably the first blockbuster film three years later. Gone with the Wind follows the life of Scarlett O&amp;rsquo;Hara for around 15 years observing the start of the civil war and the tumultuous reconstruction that followed. This book has often courted controversy and how could it not? This is a story of the south, by someone who loved the south.
&amp;mdash;-Main Characters&amp;mdash;-
Scarlett
The epitome of a southern belle, except that her charms are only skin deep. A beautiful headstrong girl who has always been the center of attention, surrounded by suitors and always pampered. As a main character I have never liked anyone less. The whole book is from her point of view which in the early part of the book is the same as being stuck inside a ditzy 17-year-old girl&amp;rsquo;s head. Scarlett isn&amp;rsquo;t stupid per se, but nothing abstract interests her, as such, much of the philosophy of the South is omitted from the book and instead is presented through motifs. Honestly this might be for the best, as because of this the book seldom gets bogged down in preaching for a way of life that we as a society have decidedly rejected. Scarlett may not be stupid in a classical sense, but she is clueless how to live life and to know what she really wants. In many ways she is the most believable of the main characters and while it is often not pleasant to be stuck in her head, I feel the same way about being stuck in my head sometimes.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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