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<title>Keyword: franklyscarlett</title>
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<title>Gone With The Wind (column by George Will)</title>
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<description>Confined to her bed in Atlanta by a broken ankle and arthritis, she was given a stack of blank paper by her husband, who said, &#x26;#x22;Write a book.&#x26;#x22; Did she ever. The novel&#x26;#x27;s first title became its last words, &#x26;#x22;Tomorrow is another day,&#x26;#x22; and at first she named the protagonist Pansy. But Pansy became Scarlett, and the title of the book published 70 years ago this week became &#x26;#x22;Gone With the Wind.&#x26;#x22; You might think that John Steinbeck, not Margaret Mitchell, was the emblematic novelist of the 1930s, and that the publishing event in American fiction in that difficult decade...</description>
<author>Townhall.com</author>
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