Lost Laysen

Lost Laysen

by Margaret Mitchell
Publisher: Macmillan
Hardcover, 689 pages
Not in stock

The world saw only one book by Margaret Mitchell published in her lifetime, the incomparable Gone With the Wind, the most popular novel in American history. Upon her death in 1949, her personal papers, almost all other writing, and even the original typescript of Gone With the Wind were destroyed. Now, sixty years later, the impossible has happened: The world has another story from Margaret Mitchell. Better still, it's a delight, a fitting predecessor to America's most beloved epic novel.

A spirited tale of love and honor on a doomed South Pacific island called Laysen, Lost Laysen would be justly praised as a charming effort by a remarkable young talent if it were its author's only work. But it isn't, of course, and Lost Laysen also enchants because of the many fascinating ways it foretells Gone With the Wind: in its two central male characters, one a gentleman and the other more rough-hewn, who vie for the attention of a feisty. independent-minded woman, and who will go to any lengths to defend her honor; in its re-creation of a vanished world; and in its unforgettable ending.

The real-life romance at the heart of Lost Laysen's discovery is as enthralling as any work of fiction. Margaret Mitchell gave the story, handwritten in two lined notebooks, to a young suitor, Henry Love Angel. Angel put the notebooks away for safekeeping, just as he put away all of Mitchell's intimate letters to him, as well as their treasured photographs taken over the years. Well over half a century passed before Henry Love Angel's son, realizing what had been passed down to him, brought the story, the letters, and the photos to Atlanta's Road to Tara Museum. Nationally respected Margaret Mitchell historian Debra Freer masterfully weaves Margaret Mitchell's never-before-seen letters and photographs into a fascinating introduction that tells the story of Mitchell's relationship with Henry Love Angel and puts the writing of Lost Laysen into its proper context.

Lost Laysen is pure magic, a gift for us to cherish from America's most beloved storyteller.

MARGARET MUNNERLYN MITCHELL (1900- 1949) was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia. Gone With the Wind, her only other published work of fiction, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937. It has sold more than thirty million copies in more than thirty-one countries.

DEBRA J. FREER is a noted authority on Margaret Mitchell's life. She has lectured widely, and her writing on Margaret Mitchell has appeared in Art & Antiques and other publications. Since April 1995, she has been Guest Curator at the Road to Tara Museum in Atlanta, Georgia. She lives in Atlanta.

from the dust jacket

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