http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/80761000/jpg/_80761302_6192901a-1422-447d-8b7a-dfa58266bbc8.jpg
Harper Lee is to publish her second novel - 55 years after To Kill A Mockingbird.
Go Set a Watchman, a novel the Pulitzer Prize-winning author completed in the 1950s and put aside, will be released on 14 July, her publishers said.
It is essentially a sequel to To Kill A Mockingbird, featuring Scout Finch as an adult - although it was actually written first.
Lee's editor persuaded her to rework some of the story's flashback sequences as a novel in their own right. That book became Mockingbird.
"I was a first-time writer, so I did as I was told," said the author in a statement. "I hadn't realised it [the original book] had survived, so was surprised and delighted when my dear friend and lawyer Tonja Carter discovered it.
"After much thought and hesitation, I shared it with a handful of people I trust and was pleased to hear that they considered it worthy of publication. I am humbled and amazed that this will now be published after all these years."
― Mark G, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 15:58 (ten years ago)
Wow!
― Poliopolice, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 16:23 (ten years ago)
holy cow
― bizarro gazzara, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 16:24 (ten years ago)
When you've never published anything else, it must be genuinely terrifying to put out something that cannot fail to be compared to one of the best loved and best selling books of all time.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 16:34 (ten years ago)
vashti bunyan pwned
― pro war Toby Keith songs would rub you the wrong way (imago), Tuesday, 3 February 2015 16:47 (ten years ago)
So assuming it's good, which one would future generations read first?
― Spencer Chow, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 16:48 (ten years ago)
Not sure if I'm ready for Scout as a grown-up. It's like contemplating Charlie Brown as a dentist or something.
― something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 3 February 2015 17:00 (ten years ago)
This is kind of mind-blowing. I guess 1960 isn't a crazily the long ago, but somehow Harper Lee feels as far back as Steinbeck. Probably just because of when the book is set.
― jmm, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 17:00 (ten years ago)
crazily the long
― jmm, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 17:02 (ten years ago)
I'm a bit wary after reading this article...
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 17:11 (ten years ago)
the fact that she wrote it at the same time makes this genuinely promising and exciting
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 3 February 2015 18:28 (ten years ago)
don't see anything in that article that should make you wary of a book she wrote before Mockingbird.
― akm, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 18:32 (ten years ago)
It's more, I'm not sure that is 100% true? Tonja Carter has allegedly sent out wrong statements in Lee's name before...
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 3 February 2015 18:37 (ten years ago)
I gather the issue now is what jezebel is reporting, which is that it's odd this is happening so soon after her sister/lawyer died and that Harper Lee may be senile and now aware of how this agreement has happened. But, that is making an awful lot of assumptions.
― akm, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 04:24 (ten years ago)
i barely got to be excited about this & u guys are already bumming me out
*kicks dirt*
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 04:37 (ten years ago)
jezebel and random conspiracy theorists on twitter are not enough to convince me that this isn't a legitimate and authorized publication. there are lots of reasons a person of her age, maybe in failing health, might want to do this.
― akm, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 04:51 (ten years ago)
Sequel Joke 2: Electric Sequeloo
― walid foster dulles (man alive), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 04:55 (ten years ago)
Kill Mo' Mockingbird
― Hammer Smashed Bagels, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 05:43 (ten years ago)
Mockingbird 2: The Scoutening
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 05:54 (ten years ago)
saw 2 Kill 2 Mockingbird elsewhere
― The Understated Twee Hotel On A Mountain (silby), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 05:58 (ten years ago)
MockingBURR
― Hammer Smashed Bagels, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 06:07 (ten years ago)
racism is back and madder than hell!
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 06:12 (ten years ago)
Legend of Radley's Gold
― walid foster dulles (man alive), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 07:34 (ten years ago)
Electric Boo-galoo
― walid foster dulles (man alive), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 07:35 (ten years ago)
Scout in the City
― Mark G, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 07:55 (ten years ago)
there are very few reasons to believe the MS is even legit, and approximately none to believe that it's being issued with Lee's awareness and approval.
― oochie wally (clean version) (sic), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 11:32 (ten years ago)
Given the both the track record of belatedly released lost books or sequels (Joseph Heller, Ralph Ellison, etc.) as well as the aggressive wrangling over Lee's rights/estate, I am suspicious. Also not sure, per Heller's "Closing Time," that I want a sequel to such a beloved, perfect book.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 14:36 (ten years ago)
well this thread got depressing fast
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 16:59 (ten years ago)
God knows Mockingbird kicks the ass of a lot of other Required Reading of my HS years (A Separate Peace, anyone?) but c'mon, it's just a particularly memorable white-savior tale.
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 17:03 (ten years ago)
the movie's a lot better than it should have been.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 17:06 (ten years ago)
that's 80% due to Mulligan's direction of the child performances, i think.
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 17:19 (ten years ago)
it's just a particularly memorable white-savior tale
It's also beautifully written, which puts it ahead of most books, period, white-savior tale or no. And frankly, I don't think it's fair to taint its reputation with the countless white-savior tales that have followed in its wake.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 17:37 (ten years ago)
it's probably the only required reading that everybody i know remembers fondly, so it must have done something right.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 17:50 (ten years ago)
that's 80% due to Mulligan's direction of the child performances, i think.― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, February 4, 2015 11:19 AM (49 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, February 4, 2015 11:19 AM (49 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
that and his customarily subtle subjective camera. i like the book a lot, but it's precisely the kind of book that was more likely to get the white-gloves stanley kramer treatment. we're lucky mulligan and pakula optioned it.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 18:10 (ten years ago)
the movie's a lot better than it should have been.― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, February 4, 2015 5:06 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, February 4, 2015 5:06 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I've only seen the movie once, in sections, while at school and didn't enjoy it - found it stuffy and really jarring compared to my interpretation of the book, particularly the father/children relationship. May give it another go, though.
― michaellambert, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 19:50 (ten years ago)
it's worth seeing again, esp. if you have a little more distance from the book.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 4 February 2015 20:15 (ten years ago)
About 16 or 17 years should do the trick!
― michaellambert, Wednesday, 4 February 2015 20:28 (ten years ago)
http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2015/02/friends_say_harper_lee_was_man.html
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 5 February 2015 12:53 (ten years ago)
worst url yet
― pro war Toby Keith songs would rub you the wrong way (imago), Thursday, 5 February 2015 12:57 (ten years ago)
It seems pretty incredibly shady?
http://the-toast.net/2015/02/04/questions-harper-lee-editor-interview/
― Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 5 February 2015 13:53 (ten years ago)
Harper Lee — we call her Nelle
What do you mean "we," white man?
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 5 February 2015 14:52 (ten years ago)
She’s getting progressively deafer and more blind
she’s very deaf and going blind
Yeah, tell me about, things seem to be progressing very quickly from "deafer" to "very deaf."
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 5 February 2015 14:55 (ten years ago)
If they knew what was right they would put this manuscript under glass in a museum somewhere and let people look at it but never read it.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 5 February 2015 14:57 (ten years ago)
you guys know Dill was Truman Capote, right?
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 5 February 2015 17:19 (ten years ago)
And isn't Harper Lee also in Other Voices, Other Rooms?
― MrDasher, Thursday, 5 February 2015 18:24 (ten years ago)
isn't there a crazy (sexist) rumor that Capote actually wrote To Kill a Mockinbird?
― Modern French Music from Failure to Boulez (askance johnson), Thursday, 5 February 2015 18:32 (ten years ago)
yes, but i prefer the rumor that lee actually wrote "in cold blood."
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 5 February 2015 18:38 (ten years ago)
it's a pretty persistent rumor.
has anyone done that statistical prose analysis on the book. obviously that sort of thing is far from definitive, since even if some dominant similarities were to be found, lee could have been influenced by capote... or if few similarities could be found, capote could have been consciously trying to write in a different style. but it'd be interesting, perhaps.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 5 February 2015 23:41 (ten years ago)
xpost
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 5 February 2015 23:42 (ten years ago)
I've only seen the movie once, in sections, while at school and didn't enjoy it
^^ for me too, though it may also have been the old VHS tape which meant Scout's high-pitched voice was blurred into incomprehensibility that didn't help
― as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Friday, 6 February 2015 00:58 (ten years ago)
like kissing?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 6 February 2015 02:53 (ten years ago)
totally played footsie during la petite sirene
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 6 February 2015 02:56 (ten years ago)
in my driver's ed class we were shown the car crash parts of FACES OF DEATH
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:04 (ten years ago)
sometimes our Latin teacher fast-forwarded through the longest sex scenes in I CLAVDIVS
― oochie wally (clean version) (sic), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:10 (ten years ago)
I'm sure eventually Capote wrote a line of dialogue as hamfisted as "Stand up, your daddy is passing by," but I haven't read it.
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:52 (ten years ago)
we saw Mockingbird in high school... and The Pawnbroker, with BREASTS
― touch of a love-starved cobra (Dr Morbius), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:53 (ten years ago)
I thought Rod Steiger's problem was bad accents.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:55 (ten years ago)
No it wouldn't. Why would someone do such thing on the basis of those idiotic rumours?
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 February 2015 10:20 (ten years ago)
There is this piece on the book:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2015/feb/06/to-kill-mockingbird-harper-lee-overrated-sequel-go-set-watchman
I haven't read since school. Too long and its not the kind of thing I'd pick up again.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 February 2015 11:22 (ten years ago)
Its been too long for me to recall my impressions of it, is what I meant.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 February 2015 11:23 (ten years ago)
sometimes our Latin teacher fast-forwarded through the longest sex scenes in I CLAVDIVS― oochie wally (clean version) (sic), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:10 (8 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― oochie wally (clean version) (sic), Friday, 6 February 2015 03:10 (8 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
That's just gonna skew the kids' future expectations!
― Mark G, Friday, 6 February 2015 12:10 (ten years ago)
Is Dr. Manhattan going to be in this Watchman book y/n?
― Οὖτις Δαυ & τηε Κνιγητσ (Phil D.), Friday, 6 February 2015 13:58 (ten years ago)
more likely cool fan fiction about what The Comedian did between Korea and 'Nam.
― A MOOC, what's a MOOC? (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 6 February 2015 16:52 (ten years ago)
wasn't really looking forward to any of the inevitable thinkpieces that try to blow your mind by arguing that a beloved classic is actually, wait for it, overrated!
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 6 February 2015 17:35 (ten years ago)
there was an interview on NPR the other day with one of Lee's close friends who visits her in her assisted living facility and he said she has no diminished mental facility, but she is almost blind. But he doubted that she could be manipulated into signing anything. Who knows.
― akm, Friday, 6 February 2015 18:19 (ten years ago)
The Guardian's arts coverage has gotten so random lately (for inst "reviewer" of Scientology doc decides that victimization by C of S=comedy), that I'm taking indefinite leave from their thoughtful clickbait.
― dow, Friday, 6 February 2015 19:27 (ten years ago)
Sarah C doesn't overdo on her opinion and says she is looking forward to the bk anyway so considering this is The Guardian it wasn't too bad.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 6 February 2015 21:37 (ten years ago)
Thanks! I'm sure they'll lure me back to clickpieces one of these days.
― dow, Friday, 6 February 2015 23:50 (ten years ago)
in my driver's ed class we were shown the car crash parts of FACES OF DEATH― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, February 6, 2015 3:04 AM
― the plight of y0landa (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 7 February 2015 00:02 (ten years ago)
that sounds kinda screwed up! but i've never seen that movie myself
― Nhex, Saturday, 7 February 2015 00:10 (ten years ago)
it's like the worst benny hill episode ever
― I dunno. (amateurist), Saturday, 7 February 2015 01:53 (ten years ago)
Better than DEATH OF FACES---worst Behind The Music-based TV movie ever.
― dow, Saturday, 7 February 2015 02:15 (ten years ago)
Harper Lee to nosey journalist: "Go away!"
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/mar/05/harper-lee-journalist-go-away-to-kill-a-mockingbird-sequel-go-set-a-watchman?CMP=fb_us
― akm, Thursday, 5 March 2015 20:54 (ten years ago)
at least he got an autograph
― akm, Thursday, 5 March 2015 20:55 (ten years ago)
uhh...
"Ms. Lee — known to many as Nelle, her legal first name — had a stroke in 2007 and has severe hearing and vision problems. But friends who visit her regularly say she can communicate well and hold lengthy conversations if visitors yell in her ear or write questions down for her to read under a special machine. (A black marker is kept in her room for this purpose.)"
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/12/arts/artsspecial/harper-lees-ability-to-consent-to-new-book-continues-to-be-questioned.html?_r=0
― flappy bird (spazzmatazz), Friday, 13 March 2015 01:29 (ten years ago)
the whole thing is depressing
― Robert Earl Hughes (dandydonweiner), Friday, 13 March 2015 01:47 (ten years ago)
yeah, even if she turns out to be somewhat "coherent" (as they say) i highly doubt she would have OK'd the release of this book without some undue pressure from people who stand to make $$ from it. sad.
― he quipped with heat (amateurist), Friday, 13 March 2015 01:52 (ten years ago)
that reporter's Harper Lee biography painted a picture of someone who wouldn't do something like this. And she seemed pretty leery of the entire publishing industry in that book, too.
― Robert Earl Hughes (dandydonweiner), Friday, 13 March 2015 01:54 (ten years ago)
http://www.cnn.com/2015/03/13/living/feat-harper-lee-kill-a-mockingbird-elder-abuse/index.html
that settles that?
― akm, Friday, 13 March 2015 21:53 (ten years ago)
had to LOL at this in the times story:
The writer Marja Mills, who lived next to the Lee sisters in Monroeville for about 18 months beginning in the fall of 2004 and wrote a book about the experience, “The Mockingbird Next Door: Life With Harper Lee,”
it gets the point across i suppose but jesus what a witless title
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 14 March 2015 02:11 (ten years ago)
To Kill an Albatross? The 800 Pound Mockingbird? The Mockingbird in the Room? Mockingbird is the Word?
Bird Up?
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 14 March 2015 02:55 (ten years ago)
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/03/books/harper-lee-go-set-a-watchman-may-have-been-found-earlier-than-thought.html
plot thickens, again
― wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 2 July 2015 19:20 (ten years ago)
whole situ is v weird & confusing (at least to me)
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 2 July 2015 21:47 (ten years ago)
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/07/11/books/review-harper-lees-go-set-a-watchman-gives-atticus-finch-a-dark-side.html?_r=0
Wtf
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 July 2015 03:34 (nine years ago)
Shockingly, in Ms. Lee’s long-awaited novel, “Go Set a Watchman” (due out Tuesday), Atticus is a racist who once attended a Klan meeting, who says things like “The Negroes down here are still in their childhood as a people.” Or asks his daughter: “Do you want Negroes by the carload in our schools and churches and theaters? Do you want them in our world?”
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 July 2015 03:35 (nine years ago)
Apparently this is more of an early draft of Mockingbird than a sequel. This Atticus is like a prototype. Very weird it's being published
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 July 2015 03:37 (nine years ago)
Scout is shocked to find, during her trip home, that her beloved father, who taught her everything she knows about fairness and compassion, has been affiliating with raving anti-integration, anti-black crazies, and the reader shares her horror and confusion. How could the saintly Atticus — described early in the book in much the same terms as he is in “Mockingbird” — suddenly emerge as a bigot? Suggestions about changing times and the polarizing effects of the civil rights movement seem insufficient when it comes to explaining such a radical change, and the reader, like Scout, cannot help feeling baffled and distressed.
closest to in i've been yet
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 11 July 2015 03:51 (nine years ago)
two friends in college used to call me Patticus Finch
― Treeship, Saturday, 11 July 2015 04:50 (nine years ago)
i feel ambivalent about this now
welcome to February 2015
― let no-one live rent free in your butt (sic), Saturday, 11 July 2015 08:23 (nine years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/Fej5kQd.jpg
― 龜, Wednesday, 15 July 2015 19:06 (nine years ago)
My wife read that Laura Ingalls Wilder "Pioneer Girl" book, which is essentially an early draft of what became "Little House on the Prairie," and she found it very rewarding. They probably should have done something like that here. Rather than release it with any fanfare just snuck it out as an early draft of "Mockingbird." Also, they should have waited for Lee to be dead.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 15 July 2015 20:47 (nine years ago)
Good essay:http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/07/27/sweet-home-alabama
(Lee's) Southernness, however much it is now the material of cliché, is still the most pleasing thing about the book—the kind of easy, Agee and McCullers Southernness (as against Tennessee Williams’s more Gothic version) that was as much a part of the postwar American novel as Jewishness, of which it was the alternative construction. Jews (in Bellow, Malamud, early Roth) were urban, worried, and compellingly neurotic; Southerners (in Capote, McCullers, Harper Lee) were rural, carefree, and absolutely crazy. As always with such things, neither construction makes sense unless you see the missing central panel that both are reacting to: the Wasp ascendancy, only just about to be called so—that average American whiteness from which Southern drinking and Jewish schmalz alike could seem welcome refuges.
― ... (Eazy), Wednesday, 15 July 2015 20:50 (nine years ago)
RIP
― Mordy, Friday, 19 February 2016 17:08 (nine years ago)
never read the new one but it's hard to overstate the impact that mockingbird had on american culture
― Mordy, Friday, 19 February 2016 17:09 (nine years ago)
wait really?
aw man :(
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 19 February 2016 18:26 (nine years ago)
― bored at work (snoball), Friday, 19 February 2016 18:53 (nine years ago)
:(
rip harper
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 19 February 2016 19:28 (nine years ago)
what a fiasco with go set a watchman. such a blemish, horrible to see her be taken advantage of like that
― flappy bird, Friday, 19 February 2016 19:40 (nine years ago)
my son's 7th grade English class just did a whole multi-week segment on To Kill A Mockingbird and connections to the civil rights movement.
― Check Yr Scrobbles (Moodles), Friday, 19 February 2016 20:11 (nine years ago)