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Afternoons with Harper Lee

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Imagine sitting with an esteemed writer on his or her front porch somewhere in the world and swapping life stories. Dr. Wayne Flynt got the opportunity to do just this with Nelle Harper Lee. In a friendship that blossomed over a dozen years starting when Lee relocated back to Alabama after having had a stroke, Flynt and his wife Dartie became regular visitors at the assisted living facility that was Lee's new home. And there the conversation began. It began where it always begins with Southern storytellers, with an invitation to "Come in, sit down, and stay a while."
The stories exchanged ranged widely over the topics of Alabama history, Alabama folklore, family genealogy, and American literature, of course. On the way from beginning to end there were many detours: talks about Huntingdon College; The University of Alabama; New York City; the United Kingdom; Garden City, Kansas; and Mobile, Alabama, to name just a few. Wayne and his wife were often joined by Alice Lee, the oldest Lee sister, a living encyclopedia on the subject of family genealogy, and middle sister Louise Lee Conner.
The hours spent visiting, in intimate closeness, are still cherished by Wayne Flynt. They yielded revelations large and small, which have been shaped into Afternoons with Harper Lee. Part memoir, part biography, this book offers a unique window into the life and mind and preoccupations of one of America's best-loved writers. Flynt and Harper Lee and her sisters learned a great deal from each other, and though this is not a history book, their shared interest in Alabama and its history made this extraordinary work possible.

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    • Library Journal

      September 9, 2022

      Part memoir, part biography, this book presents a chatty reminiscence of ten years of close friendship between Harper Lee and Flynt (emeritus, history, Auburn; Mockingbird Songs: My Friendship with Harper Lee) and his wife, both fellow Alabamians who met Lee through her sisters and visited her until her death in 2016 at age 89. Flynt was Lee's chosen eulogist. Interwoven with accounts of their visits are asides on subjects like Alabama history and the family backgrounds of the Lees, the author, and his wife. Their conversations covered a wide range of subjects, prominent among which was racism. Noting that Alabama nourished Lee while New York City shaped her, Flynt speculates that her commitment to racial justice may have triggered her move north. Other topics include literature (Lee especially admired Jane Austen), religion, Lee's friendship with Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson, and both the book and film of To Kill a Mockingbird. Of particular interest is the section on how Go Set a Watchman came to be discovered and published and the media frenzy it generated. VERDICT Recommended for readers interested in a close-up view of the person the author calls "America's best loved writer of the world's most famous novel."--Denise J. Stankovics

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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