MARGARET MITCHELL - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 12/15/1937 - HFSID 55663
Price: $4,800.00
MARGARET MITCHELL
Typed letter from Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and author of Gone With the Wind, to
Edwin Granberry (and wife), who wrote one of the first good reviews of her book. She
discusses the up roar of a Dutch publisher bringing Gone With the Wind out in Holland
without her consent
Typed Letter Signed: "Margaret", 1p, 7x11. Atlanta, Georgia, 1937 December 15. On
personal letterhead to Edwin and Mabel. In part: "By all means keep 'Co. "Aytch"' as
long as you like. Our plans, as usual, are in a snarl. Perhaps you've seen items in the
paper about a Dutch publisher bringing out 'Gone With the Wind' in Holland without my
consent. I have lost my case in the lower Dutch courts and have appealed. I took the
matter to the Department of State in Washington and they are working on it now. That
may mean we will have to remain in Atlanta in case we are needed.…" "CO. AYTCH",
MAURY GRAYS, FIRST TENNESSEE REGIMENT; OR, A SIDE SHOW OF THE
BIG SHOW , published in 1882, was written by Samuel R. Watkins. Watkins, a
Confederate private with Co. H, 1st Tennessee Infantry, fought in the western theatre of the war
and saw action in most of the major battles in the west. As she discusses in this letter, she
pursued a Dutch pirate publisher through Dutch courts in 1937, and continued during
the WWII Nazi occupation of Holland until, after the war, she finally got royalties and
a cash settlement. MARGARET MITCHELL (1900-1949), a native of Atlanta,
Georgia, was awarded the 1937 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction for Gone With the Wind, her
epic novel set against the backdrop of the American Civil War and Reconstruction South. At
first uncertain about her book's literary merit, she had submitted her manuscript to Macmillan
Company in 1935. Mitchell was stunned -- and thrust into the public spotlight -- when the book
sold over 1.3 million copies in its first year. It remained on the best-seller list for 21 weeks,
enjoying resurgence in sales with the release of the 1939 film based on the novel. EDWIN
GRANBERRY, a freelance book reviewer and critic, had reviewed her book in a
glowing and unprecedented 1,200-word piece in the New York "Evening Sun" on June 30,
1936, the day of the book's publication. Mitchell had been so impressed by the report, which
compared her book to Tolstoy's War and Peace, that she had written to thank him. Her letter
started a lifelong correspondence -- and a friendship between the two couples: Margaret and
her husband, JOHN MARSH, and Edwin (a Southerner himself) and his wife, MABEL.
Margaret and John first met the Granberrys at Blowing Rock, North Carolina, the
summer campus of Florida's Rollins College, where Granberry was a Professor of English. It
was during this visit that she had agreed to accept $50,000 in movie rights for her book
pending contract negotiations with producer David O. Selznick (against Granberry's advice).
Mitchell would meet HERSCHEL BRICKELL, a literary critic from Ridgefield, Connecticut,
and his wife, NORMA, at a writers' retreat at Blowing Rock in August 1936. Brickell had
also written a publication day review of Gone With the Wind in the "New York Post",
calling the book a "striking piece of literature." Mitchell had written to him at the same time she
had written to Granberry, and, as with Granberry, continued her correspondence with him.
Besides their visits to Blowing Rock, the Marshes often vacationed with the Granberrys at
their home in Winter Park, Florida. An extraordinarily personal letter with fine literary
associations! Multiple mailing folds. Lightly toned and creased. Light Foxing (not effecting
signature). Otherwise, fine condition.
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