![]() Margaret Mitchell claimed not to have read Thackeray’s novel until after she had completed her Civil War saga and confessed her inability ever to get very far in Tolstoy’s monumental work. Upon its publication, reviewers drew comparisons with William Makepeace Thackeray’s Vanity Fair and Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace. Dismissed by most academic literary critics for being uneven, flawed, and conventionally written in an age marked by literary experimentation, and attacked by some cultural commentators as promulgating racist myths and undermining the very foundations of its basically feminist paradigm, the best-selling novel of the twentieth century continues to withstand its detractors. ![]() Atlanta native Margaret Mitchell’s 1936 novel of the Civil War (1861-65) and Reconstruction in Georgia, Gone With the Wind, occupies an important place in any history of twentieth-century American literature. ![]()
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