![]() ![]() Margaret Mitchell shows how different life and values are in times of peace from times of war. Gumption and Survival in Gone with the Wind While it has a relatively simplistic writing style and does not contain the most enjoyable of dialogues, it makes up for these shortcomings by being a compelling story of human struggles in difficult circumstances. The story has sixty-three(63) chapters and is divided into five(5) parts, all of which follow a chronological order. It is a very long read that requires patience from readers to understand the detailed picture it tries to paint. It follows Scarlett O’Hara’s transition from a charming country girl whose only cares in the world were pretty dresses and handsome beaux, to a cold, hardened woman who would cheat, steal, murder, and numb her conscience to every value she once thought sacred in a bid to survive and escape starvation. Gone with the Wind is a book about how war, starvation, and adversity can reduce one’s humanity to the basest instinct for survival at all costs. ![]()
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