Friday, February 19, 2016

Harper Lee - # 127

Harper Lee, Author of To Kill a Mockingbird, Dead at 89


She was number 127 on the list.

Harper Lee, the Alabama-born novelist whose Pulitzer Prize-winning best-seller To Kill a Mockingbird has been a mainstay of American educational reading lists since its publication in 1960, died in her Monroeville home on Friday. She was 89.

By several accounts, Lee had been in failing health for some time, and while there were those who questioned her state of mind in her final years, Wayne Flynt, an Alabama author-historian and friend of Lee's for more than a decade, recently told The New York Times: "I don't think that anybody that says she's demented has been to see her in the last 10 years. The problem may be that almost nobody goes to see her, almost nobody gets in. She's such a private person."

Publishing giant HarperCollins announced her death on Friday, with the company's president, Michael Morrison, saying he will always cherish the time he spent with her.

"The world knows Harper Lee was a brilliant writer, but what many don't know is that she was an extraordinary woman of great joyfulness, humility and kindness," he said in a statement. "She lived her life the way she wanted to – in private – surrounded by books and the people who loved her."

Lee's agent, Andrew Nurnberg, recalled seeing her just weeks before her death.

"When I saw her just six weeks ago, she was full of life, her mind and mischievous wit as sharp as ever," he said. "She was quoting Thomas More and setting me straight on Tudor history. We have lost a great writer, a great friend and a beacon of integrity."

Last February, it was announced that Go Set a Watchman, the long-awaited second book by Lee, would be published in the summer. It "features the [Mockingbird tomboy heroine] character known as Scout as an adult woman," the author herself said in a statement released through her publisher.

Originally written in the 1950s, Watchman is effectively a follow-up to Lee's breakthrough debut novel, which in its 55 years has sold a remarkable 40 million copies.

So profound was the reaction to the new book's announcement that it not only made all the television newscasts and generated international Twitter comment, but it sent sales of her original work skyrocketing once again. Amazon.com in the U.K. alone reported an increase in sales of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird to be up 3,000 percent, and sales of the DVD of the 1962 film adaptation – which brought the Best Actor Oscar to its leading man, Gregory Peck – up 1,200 percent.

Though transparently autobiographical on the author's part, the novelist's fictional hero, Atticus Fitch, is the widowed father of two children, Jem and Scout, and a small-town lawyer in the Jim Crow South. Their very quiet lives are forever changed when Atticus takes on the case of a black man accused by a white girl of a sexual assault that he did not commit.

"Pleasant, undemanding reading," critiqued the Atlantic Monthly in its original review, though others were far less restrained. Time magazine outright lauded the work, saying, "Author Lee, 34, an Alabaman, has written her first novel with all of the tactile brilliance and none of the preciosity generally supposed to be standard swamp-warfare issue for Southern writers. The novel is an account of an awakening to good and evil . . . [Lee] teaches the reader an astonishing number of useful truths about little girls and about Southern life."

With that, an instant new literary celebrity was born – one who would then spend nearly the rest of her life avoiding the spotlight, avoiding interviews and, most especially, avoiding the publication of another book.

No comments:

Post a Comment