A book that you don't want to put down when you pick it up and start reading. Scarlett is the most unique heroine I've read in many books. I didn't like Scarlett at all at first. In today's words, she is a selfish and proud narcissist. All day long, she thinks that all the men in the county can bow down under her pomegranate skirt, and she also takes pleasure in it. Later, she fell in love with Asili, who was engaged, and only saw a little bit of her heart, but after being rejected by her love, she married herself in a foolish way. It wasn't until the night she returned to Tara Manor after Atlanta fell that I really fell in love with her, tough, brave, pungent, fearless, like she said she had Irish ancestors in her blood. spiritual will. I really hope that Scarlett can be with Rhett Butler in the end, so that the second half of her life can be less hard.. This is what I felt after reading the upper part of "Gone with the Wind" many years ago. Later, I waited until I finished the lower part before watching the movie. The heroine of the movie, Vivien Leigh, is simply Scarlett Hao who came out of the book. She is beautiful, elegant, arrogant, and selfish. Even the green eyes are so appropriate. But for such a masterpiece, a four-hour movie is obviously not a complete description. A lot of places are too rushed, and they are all taken with one stroke. But "Gone with the Wind" is still a great work, just like the book.
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