The Wind Done Gone
What is the importance if the setting in the novel, The Wind Done Gone?
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The setting of the novel is important because this novel is a parody of another classic novel therefore it is important that the setting be similar to that of the original novel. The author of this novel has set her story in Atlanta, the same city where the classic novel ended. The author also utilizes another setting of the classic novel, the plantation, Tara, where Scarlett O'Hara grew up, where she returned during the siege of Atlanta, and where she runs to when her husband, Rhett, leaves her. In this novel, the author shows the reader a different, darker, side of Tara and the family who lived there. Hence, the setting of the novel works perfectly with the plot of the novel.
The Wind Done Gone, BookRags