Ellen F. Brown is a rare book dealer and freelance writer specializing in stories about antiquarian books and the rare book industry. She lives in Richmond, Virginia. John Wiley, Jr. owns one of the largest collections of Gone With the Wind memorabilia in private hands, including every American edition of the novel and over 600 foreign editions. He writes a quarterly newsletter, The Scarlett Letter, for GWTW fans and collectors.
Oh my goodness what a beautiful book! I started reading and
couldn’t put it down last night, turned off the light close to 1am.
A real winner.
*executive producer of Georgia Public Broadcasting's documentary,
Margaret Mitchell: American Rebel*
In a narrative as engaging and well-paced as that of Gone With the
Wind itself, Brown and Wiley chronicle the journey of the story
that captured the world’s imagination and the woman whose tireless
efforts changed the way books are made, sold, and read. This is a
celebration of the unique power great books have to shelter, heal,
and unite us and it is a must-read for anyone who has wondered what
life is like for the artists whose work changes our lives.
*The Book Lady's Blog*
History is one of my loves and any book that delves into the
hidden, behind-the-scenes stories of great events fascinates me.
Ellen Brown and John Wiley have written just such a book,
explaining the untold story of Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the
Wind. This is a must read for any aficionado of this classic in
American literature.
*Steve Berry, New York Times bestselling author*
Who would have thought that reading a book about the writing of
Gone With the Wind could be almost as riveting as the real thing?
In this deep examination of the life and times of GWTW, Brown and
Wiley have inked a masterwork of their own. Booklovers of all
stripes—not just those who bleed scarlet when pricked—will be
enthralled by this story of one of the great literary successes of
modern times.
*Dean King, author of Skeletons on the Zahara and Unbound*
...[T]he story behind the story is the riveting equivalent of a
literary thriller.
*Style Weekly*
Entertaining and thoroughly researched, Margaret Mitchell's Gone
With the Wind provides fascinating new insights into the woman who
created one of the world's most famous and enduring couples.
*The Atlanta Journal-Constitution*
Amazingly, Brown and Wiley have written a book about a novel
that...reads like a novel.
*Boomer Magazine*
With such comprehensive research and dynamic writing, this book is
certain to appeal to a wide audience of literary, history, and film
buffs.
*Fine Books & Collections*
...[R]eads like an intriguing international mystery. Granted
unprecedented access to records and correspondence about the book’s
publishing, movie that followed and legacy that remains, the
authors reveal the whole saga—worthy of a fainting spell from
Scarlett herself.
*Deep South Magazine*
[Brown and Wiley] tell a new version of events and give a fuller
picture of the phenomenon than anyone before.
*River City Fiction blog*
A must-read for aficionados, Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind
is engaging history—and a powerful testament to the plucky Georgian
who birthed her fictional baby and then, with dignity and grace,
protected that child from tasteless, dishonest and unworthy
assaults.
*Richmond Times-Dispatch*
...[T]he authors expertly turn even the most technical subjects
into an adventure.
*Publishers Weekly*
Immaculately researched and addictively readable...a fascinating
read for both casual and fervent fans alike.
*Gone With the Wind Scrapbook*
Who would image that a book about the publication history of a
novel would be so fascinating?
*Author Magazine*
A beat up manuscript that was viewed as unfinished quickly became a
cultural icon. Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind: A
Bestseller's Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood tells the story of
both Gone with the Wind and its author Margaret Mitchell. An enigma
of her contemporaries, people for years have wondered how the novel
came into being and how it cached on so hotly, as well as what was
the intent of the author during the story's dramatic almost
cliffhanger ending. A fascinating exploration of literature,
culture, and film, Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind: A
Bestseller's Odyssey from Atlanta to Hollywood is a fine read and
highly recommended.
*Midwest Book Review*
Fans of GWTW will surely enjoy this new book, but anyone with an
interest in writing, publishing, or bookselling will find something
to appreciate in this look inside the industry. Mitchell's book had
quite a life of its own and reading about it from conception to
publishing phenomenon to international copyright horror is
endlessly fascinating. Margaret Mitchell alone imbues the book with
such a charming and vivacious spirit I felt I couldn't get enough
of her.
*Cavalier House Books, Denham Springs, LA*
...[W]ill fascinate not only fans of the book and movie, but anyone
interested in literary/filmmaking development.
*Las Vegas Review Journal*
Learning more about how this fascinating book came into being and
how it still stands up to today's reading demands is a captivating
subject, and Brown and Wiley do an admirable job shining light on
the process.
*Ventura County Star*
[W]ill enthrall the general reader as well as the wannabe
author.
*StarNews*
A fascinating exploration of literature, culture, and film,
'Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind: A Bestseller's Odyssey
from Atlanta to Hollywood' is a fine read and highly
recommended.
*Midwest Book Review*
People with an interest in Gone With the Wind and the publishing
business in general will find much to fascinate in this captivating
history of the Gone With the Wind empire. Highly recommended.
*Devourer of Books blog*
Brown and Wiley give Mitchell’s monumental novel its due here.
Drawing on meticulous research and unprecedented access to private
papers, they follow Gone With the Wind from the glimmer of an idea
to explosion as a global bestseller, hugely popular film, and
subject of heated copyright battles. This is a vivid, highly
readable account of the life of a story—and, incidentally, of its
spirited, scrappy author. It is also a remarkable contribution to
publishing history and literary studies.
*Susann Cokal, Author of Mirabilis and Breath and Bones*
Any novice writer who aspires to pen a phenomenally successful
novel will come away wide-eyed from this detailed and
well-documented account of the creation, publication, and ongoing
product management of Margaret Mitchell’s famous novel of the Civil
War South, which celebrates its 75th anniversary this year.
Freelance author Brown and Gone With the Wind collector Wiley take
readers on the journey from Mitchell’s typewriter to Hollywood,
showing how much care is required to maintain legal rights when it
comes to publication, movie production, and merchandising, not to
mention the 1930s price wars between drugstore book racks and
traditional bookstores. The authors show the genesis of the novel
itself, which Mitchell started as a way to fill time as she
recuperated from an ankle injury. Once she completed the
manuscript, prepublication interest grew. Before long, she found
herself coping with fan mail and autograph seekers. The book
concludes with current efforts by Mitchell’s estate to uphold the
copyright, which expires in 2031. VERDICT This will appeal to all
fans of the book or the film, as well as popular literary history
buffs and writers.
*Library Journal*
[A] fascinating perspective on the life of a tremendously
successful book...
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