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The Wind Done Gone

The Wind Done Gone

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $16.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Hurricane
Review: Controversy and curiosity are two of the words surrounding Alice Randall's novel "The Wind Done Gone." Cynara a house slave born of her slave mother and white master is a beautiful honey colored woman of the South who could probably pass for white but chooses not to. Cynara, also known as Cinnamon or Cindy, is a mulatto who works in the big house and competes for the love of her Mammy mother, with the white children that her mother cares for. The competition between the master's other children and Cynara becomes so intense that Cynara is sent away. She is sold to another family as a house servant, but that does not last long.

Cynara soon finds herself in Atlanta working for Beauty, who is a madam. Cynara is now living and working in a flophouse. It is in this flophouse that she meets the handsome and mysterious R. He is a former Confederate soldier who has settled in Atlanta. R. showers Cynara with the finest things that money can buy, even a beautiful home. However, the one thing that R. does not give Cynara is the priceless gift of respect. R. is a married man, his wife is Cynara's half-sister, and he has never once called Cynara by her given name. Instead, he refers to her by her slave names of Cinnamon or Cindy, and if they have personal disagreements he treats her harshly.

"The Wind Done Gone" sheds light on the lives of former slaves during the Reconstruction Era. There is a black man who is elected to Congress, there are black physicians, and black property owners. This book is based on Cynara's diary, and allows readers to see this critical time in history through her eyes. "The Wind Done Gone" was well worth the wait, the court battle, and the controversy, on the RAW scale it is a 4.

Reviewed by Simone A. Hawks

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Poorly written
Review: This book is poorly written and contains no plot at all. This is just a politically correct attempt to defame one of the greatest novels of all time. This book shouldn't be on the same shelf as Gone With the Wind. Don't waste your money on this so called parody.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very poorly done
Review: This book really wasn't worth all the fuss that it got in the press - good or bad. I'm not sure what Ms. Randall was trying to accomplish by writing this book. It was very poorly written; the main character's thoughts jumped all over the place that the reader can't really follow them and understand the point - if there is one - that's being made. Cynara is supposed to be an intelligent person with intelligent thoughts, and I don't see that in this writing.

Maybe Ms. Randall could have done a much better job of explaining plantation life from a slave's point of view if she hadn't tried to focus so much on Gone With the Wind. Her fascination with GWTW is distracting, particularly to one who has read it. As a result, I noticed alarming parallels with her phrases and settings to Ms. Mitchell's work, and see an individual taking credit and making money off of someone else's original work. It's a shame, particularly when the work in question isn't anything to be proud of.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Afrocentric Revisionist Fantasy
Review: As a historian and Gone with the Wind fan, I found this book very disappointing. The book seems to imply that the slaves were really running everyone's lives. I can't believe I was tricked into reading this book. No wonder the estate of Margaret Mitchell sued. What a waste.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Worst "novel" I've ever read
Review: I have read many books but this by far has to be the worst or one of the worst. I thought it might show another side to the Civil War story in Gone With the Wind but it is just this author's trashy knock off of a good novel. GWTW fans do not support this and others don't waste your time with this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't waste your time or money.
Review: There is so much hype surronding this book so I thought I would try it. I am sorry I did. I love Gone With the Wind and this is a slap in the face to Ms. Mitchell's work. I am sorry the judge didn't prevent the publication. If you have a few hours to waste then this book is for you but I don't recommend it to anyone.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: AN AMAZING AND PIVOTAL BOOK
Review: this masterpiece conveys the story of gone with the wind in a way that makes so much more sense and with much more eloquence. Randall has managed to write a book that not only heals the wounds inflicted by gwtw, but brings to light ideas that no one has ever thought of before. It is a must read for anyone who thinks that things are worth looking at twice. A real gem

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: What's all the fuss?
Review: If the estate of Margaret Mitchell had not made so much noise about this book, no one would know it existed. Pick it up and read a few pages. It is not a parody, it is a joke. Save your money and get this one from the library if you have to read it. It's episodic and lacks a narrative with any continuity. Don't look to fall in love with any of the characters.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Wish I had never read this book.
Review: I picked up this book after hearing all of the controversy over whether or not it should be published. It should never have gotten published I thought it was awful. If she ever decides to write another "novel" maybe Ms. Randall can come up with her own ideas instead of working off of another author's book. Don't bother with this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Despicable!!!! A true classic is sullied!!!
Review: This book should never have been allowed to be published. The characters and story of "Gone With The Wind" are not only etched in the hearts of millions of fans, but are copyrighted in law. To take those characters and use it in this manner is despicable and illegal. GWTW is one of the finest novels ever to be written and one of the best movies in motion picture history. "The Wind Done Gone" takes wonderful, classic characters and mocks & belittles them. GWTW was an incredible story of the Old South, a time and place that has been forever lost to the forces of political correctness "The Wind Done Gone" is nothing more than politically correct propaganda.


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