Add Papers Marked0
Paper checked off!

Marked works

Viewed0

Viewed works

Shopping Cart0
Paper added to shopping cart!

Shopping Cart

Register Now

eKönyvtár library
FAQ
 

Great deal: today with a discount!

Regular price:
387 Ft
You save:
70 Ft
Discounted price*:
316 Ft
Purchase
Add to Wish List
ID number:758922
Author:
Evaluation:
Published: 17.11.2008.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
Extract

“Gone with the wind” is one of the most popular books of all times, selling more than 30 million copies. In 1937, a year after it was published, the novel won Pulitzer Price. I chose this book because I had heard a lot about it, and I wanted to read it.
The author of the book, Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell Marsh, was born in 1900, Atlanta, Georgia. After graduating from Washington Seminary and Smith College, she started to work in “Atlanta Journal” as one of the first women-columnist. M. Mitchell was struck by a speeding car in 1949, and died in a hospital. “Gone with the wind” was her first and only book.
The story of the book is set in United States, mostly state of Georgia and Atlanta, during the Civil war (1861-1865) and the Reconstruction.
Novel is about its main character’s – Scarlett O’Hara’s struggle to be together with the man she loves and surviving the war. It shows relationship between big plantation owners and Afro-American slaves in the period before the Civil War, how they cope with each other, and from the authors’ view, chaos, that comes in the Southern states of America during the Reconstruction.
The main problem revealed in the book is that Scarlett O’Hara is blindly in love with man, who loves her only as a sister, and is married to another woman. …

Author's comment
Work pack:
GREAT DEAL buying in a pack your savings −211 Ft
Work pack Nr. 1123717
Load more similar papers

Send to email

Your name:

Enter an email address where the link will be sent:

Hi!
{Your name} suggests you to check out this eKönyvtár paper on „Book Report. Margaret Mitchell "Gone with the Wind"”.

Link to paper:
https://eng.ekonyvtar.eu/w/758922

Send

Email has been sent

Choose Authorization Method

Email & Password

Email & Password

Wrong e-mail adress or password!
Log In

Forgot your password?

Facebook

Not registered yet?

Register and redeem free papers!

To receive free papers from eKönyvtár.com it is necessary to register. It's quick and will only take a few seconds.

If you have already registered, simply to access the free content.

Cancel Register