Gone with the Wind, by Margaret MitchellFrom Encyclopedia of American Literature
Selling almost 1.5 million copies in its first year, Gone with the Wind is often cited as the fastest-selling book in U.S. publishing history. The success of the Pulitzer Prize–winning novel surprised Margaret Mitchell, a lifelong Atlanta resident, who described her only book as “a simple yarn of fairly simple people.” The novel, which runs to 1037 pages, presents a romanticized version of the Old South as it follows the fortunes of heroine Scarlett O’Hara from her pre–Civil War life as a spoiled Southern belle on Tara, her family's Georgia plantation, through the war and its aftermath.