Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Wind Done Gone: A Novel

The Wind Done Gone: A Novel

List Price: $22.00
Your Price: $15.40
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 .. 21 >>

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Inane garbage!
Review: I went to see this woman speak at The Margaret Mitchell House, where she was graciously invited and treated very well. She was incredibly rude, UN-gracious and really beyond description. For instance, when asked if she knew of Margaret Mitchell's aid to African American students during her life, she refused to acknowledge the speaker. She cannot validate her views, therefore ignores anything to the contrary. Now is that not censorship on her part? I also find her book is without value at all. She has dregged up all kinds of lame, inaccurate views of GWTW and seeks to make money off of some one else's talents. (Mitchell's). I not in agreement with the censorship of her book, or censorship in general. But after meeting this woman in person I can understand how the keepers of Ms. Mitchell's estate had valid reasons for their suit. She is an embarassment to the people she claims to vindicate. Even if all this weren't true, the book isn't even any good!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A very quick read
Review: It took me 4 to 5 hours to finish this book. The writing style is simple, the plot is thin and the characters are shallow and uncomplicated. Familiarity with GWTW is required since this book could not possibly stand on it's own. It is a vindictive answer to GWTW evidenced in Scarlet's demise and Rhett's emasculation, not a parody. I always considered GWTW silly and melodramatic so I eagerly anticipated this book knocking it down a few pegs. I was interested in another person's interpretation of GWTW, unfortunately the book itself is uninteresting.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: gone with the facts
Review: This is another sad example of revisionism in the PC age. The author just doesn't seem to get the fact that GWTW is a work of "fiction" set in the civil war south. She treats the book as if it were a recent treatise promoting racism. DONE GONE is a terribly misguided attempted to "set the record" straight about the role of black females in 19th century America. Randall needs to do a lot more thinking and researching before attempting to do that. About the only thing this book will do is expand her bank account. It certainly will not expand society's understanding of the hard road people of color--females and males alike--have had to traverse. This book just promotes literary censorship!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Political Corrections
Review: Although touted as 'the unauthorised parody' of Gone With the Wind, it lacks both the wit and humor necessary to carry it off. The story is plodding and pedestrian, told in the first person as if written in a diary. Cindy is a mulatto woman, child of Gerald O'Hara and Mammy, half-sister to Scarlett and long time lover of Rhett Butler. She's been to Europe, outlived most of the O'Hara family and is meant to be a 'strong resourceful black woman'of her time, a role model. However it is as a cardboard cutout of such a role model that she works best, being two dimensional and altogether lacking in life! Rather than exploding the myth of GWTW, this novel serves better as an example of editorial fallibility. The author meant well I'm sure, unfortunately contemporary politics and pseudo-afrocentric feminist analysis do not a great historical parody make.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Well Written
Review: I bought this book for my daughter in laws birthday we both enjoy good books and both love to read when I received the book I almost hated to give it away the book is well written easy to read easy to follow and very enlightening I believe anyone that loved the gone with the wind book will like this one one of the best I have read for awhile

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Glad the wind is let out of Gone With the Wind
Review: The controversy around the printing is what attracted me to this book as much as my hatred of Gone With the Wind. The Wind Done Gone was hard to read due to fairly constant changes in writing style (formal to informal to almost speaking in tongues). I found the story haunting and disturbing. I wanted to put it down but the story wouldn't allow me that peace. I cannot say it is my favorite book or really recommend it to anyone who thinks the souths past is romantic, but if you want a little realism in your life this is the book for you.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Apples and Oranges
Review: I happen to be one of those rare individuals who enjoyed both Gone With the Wind and The Wind Done Gone. However, they differ wildly not only in perspective but in style, scope, quality and consistency. Gone With the Wind is an ambitious work that required a great deal of research and thought. It handled numerous characters and their lives with Dickensian skill. And it was of epic length. The Wind Done Gone is a very brief contemplation on the flip side of the world depicted in Mitchell's novel. I expected Randall's work to be longer and far more detailed considering how strongly she suposedly feels about the subject matter. It doesn't really compare in scope. It is more like an essay in terms of impact. I wish that Randall had been more ambitious in her project. I would have better enjoyed reading an answer to Gone With the Wind that had been given the same amount of time and effort that the original was obviously given. It is indicative of the flaw of many recent novels, the writer lacks the stamina to deliver an authentic classic. If you are at all interested, it is worth a look. However, it does not live up to the hype. But, after all, it is her first novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Congratulations, Ms. Randall, on this great work of art.
Review: Dear Alice Randall: During the legal battle over the publication of your beautiful book, I got the impression from the press coverage that it was a parody of some sort rather than the great artistic and literary triumph that it is.

I was going to write to you to congratulate you on your beautiful book, but I decided to put my comments here instead, with the hope of encouraging others to buy your book.

Your characters are wonderful. Their names and back stories are perfect. (I was ready to start writing a letter to you after page 3. The only question was, what kind of card to send you. I decided to send an old Priests of Pallas Parade card from Kansas City. When the name, Pallas, jumped off one of your pages, I shivered.)

Your language, in all its shades, is poetic, magnificent, heart-breaking. Your understanding of history and human nature is stunning.

How beautiful and complex are the relationships, and how perfect the settings. So many passages brought tears to my eyes, that I cannot list them all. Thank you for the great pleasure you gave this reader. You spun straw into gold.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Average and Under
Review: The book has a few genuinely amusing scenes, but overall it falls short of parody: it's neither biting nor insightful. The premise is awe-inspiring, but the execution could have been so much better in abler hands.

This is another example of Hype over Substance, which is unfortunate.... the book might have been a better read if it had been given a slow word-of-mouth buildup. As it stands, you can't separate the book from the publicity, which makes the author's average writing ability seem worse than merely average.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Good concept, but this wasn't it!
Review: I eagerly awaited the publication of this story, and read it within 24 hours of receipt.

I agree that a book needed to be written debunking the romantic myths of GWTW and give a more realistic POV. Unfortunately, this was not the book. I found many (not all) of the characters far-fetched and I found it difficult to get a true feel for Cynara and where she was coming from outside of her conflicting feelings for Mammy and "Other".

I also found the alternate names for the characters quite distracting, although I understand why it was needed, it certainly took away from the continuity and enjoyment of reading.

As a "parody" (using the term loosely), it simply cannot be understood without reading or seeing GWTW.

I was hoping for so much more, and was severly disappointed.


<< 1 .. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 .. 21 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates