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Examples
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Harper Lee, "To Kill A Mockingbird"; Margaret Mitchell, "Gone With the Wind;" these are flashes in the pan.
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Margaret Mitchell herself states about the book: If Gone with the Wind has a theme, it is that of survival.
Franz-Stefan Gady: Gone with the Wind: Gone in the Head Franz-Stefan Gady 2011
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Margaret Mitchell herself states about the book: If Gone with the Wind has a theme, it is that of survival.
Franz-Stefan Gady: Gone with the Wind: Gone in the Head Franz-Stefan Gady 2011
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One of the world's most cherished and enduring pictures, "Wind" was birthed in the mind of novelist Margaret Mitchell and incubated by the brilliant, obsessive David O. Selznick, who spared no expense in bringing this powerful, affecting story to the big screen.
John Farr: Clark Gable: King of Hollywood John Farr 2012
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Margaret Mitchell herself states about the book: If Gone with the Wind has a theme, it is that of survival.
Franz-Stefan Gady: Gone with the Wind: Gone in the Head Franz-Stefan Gady 2011
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But several authors did win for their first (and sometimes only) book; among those titles were Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind (1937), Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird (1961), and Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies short-story collection (2000).
Dave Astor: A Factual History of Pulitzer-Winning Fiction Dave Astor 2012
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Marcus did the Margaret Mitchell challenge and even though he claims he's a pecker at typing — which he is — he's never stepped down from a challenge or stepped back.
Amazing Race's Marcus and Amani: We Thought We Could Make Another Comeback 2011
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Margaret Mitchell herself states about the book: If Gone with the Wind has a theme, it is that of survival.
Franz-Stefan Gady: Gone with the Wind: Gone in the Head Franz-Stefan Gady 2011
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But several authors did win for their first (and sometimes only) book; among those titles were Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind (1937), Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird (1961), and Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies short-story collection (2000).
Dave Astor: A Factual History of Pulitzer-Winning Fiction Dave Astor 2012
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Home to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and the apartment where author Margaret Mitchell wrote much of "Gone with the Wind," the neighborhood is changing from a district with office towers that emptied out at night to an arts-oriented community where people live and work.
Atlanta's Rental Rebound Maura Webber Sadovi 2011
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