Margaret Mitchell Quote

Money can’t buy everything. Someone must have told you that. You’d never think of such a platitude all by yourself. What can’t it buy? Oh, well, I don’t know—not happiness or love, anyway. Generally it can. And when it can’t, it can buy some of the most remarkable substitutes.

Margaret Mitchell

Money can’t buy everything. Someone must have told you that. You’d never think of such a platitude all by yourself. What can’t it buy? Oh, well, I don’t know—not happiness or love, anyway. Generally it can. And when it can’t, it can buy some of the most remarkable substitutes.

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About Margaret Mitchell

Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell (November 8, 1900 – August 16, 1949) was an American novelist and journalist. Mitchell wrote only one novel that was published during her lifetime, the American Civil War-era novel Gone with the Wind, for which she won the National Book Award for Fiction for Most Distinguished Novel of 1936 and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1937. Long after her death, a collection of Mitchell's girlhood writings and a novella she wrote as a teenager, titled Lost Laysen, were published. A collection of newspaper articles written by Mitchell for The Atlanta Journal was republished in book form.
Mitchell was struck and killed by a speeding drunk driver in 1949.