Mockingbird (52 page)

Read Mockingbird Online

Authors: Charles J. Shields

Thomas, G. Scott.
A New World to Be Won: John Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and the Tumultuous Year of 1960
. Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger, 2011.

Tindall, George Brown.
The Emergence of the New South 1913
–
1945. A History of the South
. Compiled and edited by Wendell Holmes Stephenson and E. Merton Coulter. Vol. X. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1967.

Walter, Eugene (as told to Katherine Clark).
Milking the Moon
. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2001.

Watson, Charles S.
Horton Foote: A Literary Biography
. Austin, TX: The Jack and Doris Smothers Series in Texas History, Life, and Culture, University of Texas Press, 2003.

Watson, Fred S.
Piney Woods Echoes: A History of Dale and Coffee Counties,
Alabama
. Enterprise, AL: Elba Clipper, 1949.

White, E. B.
Here Is New York
. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1949.

Williams, R. B., III.
The Day the Barn Almost Burned and Other Stories of Deep South Plantation Life in the 1940s.
Montgomery, AL: Court Street Press, 2000.

A
RTICLES

Adams, J. Donald. Speaking of Books (column).
The New York Times
, 2 June 1963, 27.

Adams, Phoebe. Review of
To Kill a Mockingbird
by Harper Lee.
The Atlantic Monthly
, August 1960, 98–99.

Allison, Ramona. “‘Mockingbird' Author Is Alabama's ‘Woman of the Year.'”
Birmingham Post Herald
, 3 January 1962.

“Alumna Wins Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Fiction.” University of Alabama
Alumni News
, May–June 1961.

Ames, Lynn. “Dispelling Misconceptions Between the North and the South.”
The New York Times
, 5 May 1996, WC2.

“Annie L. Williams, Authors' Agent, Dies.”
The New York Times
, 18 May 1977, O4.

“Annie Williams, Agent Who Sold ‘Gone With the Wind.'”
The Washington Post
, 20 May 1977, C8.

“Arts Council to Mull Grants, 1967 Budget.”
The Washington Post
, 11 February 1966, B3.

“Author Harper Lee Comments on Book-Banning.”
Richmond News-Leader
, 15 January 1966, 10.

Beechcroft, John. “To Kill a Mockingbird.”
Literary Guild Book Club Magazine
, August 1960, 1–2.

Bennett, Barbara. “On Harper Lee: Essays and Reflections.”
The Mississippi Quarterly
60.2 (2007), 429ff.

Best, Rebecca H. “Panopticism and the Use of ‘The Other' in To Kill a Mockingbird.”
The Mississippi Quarterly
62.3–4 (2009), 541ff.

Besten, Mark. “Too Hot for You? Take a Dip in Cold Blood.”
Louisville Eccentric Observer
, 1 August 2001, 16.

Blass, A. B. “Mockingbird Tales.”
Legacy,
Fall/Winter 1999, 22.

Boyle, Hal. “Harper Lee Running Scared, Getting Fat on Heels of Success.”
Birmingham News
, 15 March 1963.

Brady, Dave. “Harper Lee, Top Scientists Are Competition for ‘Bear.'”
The Washington Post
, 26 May 1963, C6.

Brian, Denis. “Truman Capote,” in
Truman Capote Conversations
, ed. Thomas M. Inge. Jackson, MS: University of Mississippi Press, 1987, 210–35.

Brinkmeyer, Robert H., Jr. “Scout Comes Home Again.”
Virginia Quarterly Review
, Fall 2015, 217–21.

“Brock Peters, ‘To Kill a Mockingbird' Actor, Dies at 78.”
USA Today
, 23 August 2005.

Buder, Leonard. “Opportunities for Study in Europe.”
The New York Times
, 11 April 1948, E11.

Burstein, Patricia. “Tiny, Yes, But a Terror? Do Not Be Fooled by Truman Capote in Repose.”
People Weekly
, 10 May 1976, 12–17.

Carroll, Maurice. “New York Plays Upbeat Host to Delegates.”
The New York Times
, 12 July 1976, 1.

Cep, Casey N. “Harper Lee's Abandoned True Crime Novel.”
The New Yorker
, 17 March 2015.

Chalfin, Richard. “The Day Harper Lee Came to See Me.”
New York Observer
, 4 December 2000, 5.

“Chicago Press Call.”
Rogue
. Chicago Press Club. December 1963.

Childress, Mark. “Looking for Harper Lee.”
Southern Living
, May 1997, 148–50.

“Christopher Sergel, Publisher of Plays and Playwright, 75.”
The New York Times
, 2 May 1993, B7.

Chura, Patrick. “Prolepsis and Anachronism: Emmet Till and the Historicity of To Kill a Mockingbird.”
The Southern Literary Journal
32.2 (2000).

Clemons, Walter. “The Last Word: The Pulitzer Non-Prize for Fiction.”
The New York Times
, 6 June 1971, BR55.

Cobb, Mark Hughes. “Native Stars Fall on Alabama Hall of Fame.”
Tuscaloosa News
, 17 March 2001.

Cooper, Rand Richards. “Literary Conceits: ‘The Squid and the Whale' & ‘Capote.'”
Commonweal
, 2 December 2005, 28ff.

“Countries—One Brings Tractor Order.”
The New York Times
, 5 October 1948, 28.

Crespino, Joseph. “Atticus Finch Offers a Lesson in Southern Politics.”
The New York Times
, 16 July 2015.

“Crime Scenes Revisited; ‘Infamous,' ‘King' Die at Box Office.”
The Washington Times
, 3 May 2007.

Crimmins, Margaret, and Nancy L. Ross. “Kennedy Center's Opening—It'll Be a Starry Night.”
The Washington Post
, 5 September 1971, 135.

Crowther, Bosley. “Screen: ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.'”
The New York Times
, 15 February 1963.

Culligan, Glendy. “Listen to That Mockingbird.”
The Washington Post
, 3 July 1960, E6.

Curtis, Charlotte. “Capote's Black & White Ball: ‘The Most Exquisite of Spectator Sports.'”
The New York Times
, 29 November 1966, 53.

Daley, Robert. “It's Like a Plate of Spaghetti Under New York Streets.”
Chicago Tribune
, 7 February 1960, 20.

Dare, Tim. “Lawyers, Ethics, and
To Kill a Mockingbird
.”
Philosophy and Literature
25 (April 2001), 127–41.

Deitch, Joseph. “Harper Lee: Novelist of South.”
Christian Science Monitor
, 3 October 1961, 6.

Eder, Maciej, and Jan Rybicki. “Go Set a Watchman While We Kill the Mockingbird in Cold Blood.” Computational Stylistics Group blog, n.d.

Erisman, Fred. “The Romantic Regionalism of Harper Lee.”
Alabama Review
26 (1973), 122–36.

“Exchange Students Sail: But Only 105 Leave on
Marine Jumper
Under U.S. Plan.”
The New York Times
, 7 June 1947, 29.

Faulkner, Jimmy. “How the Monroe Journal Was Purchased from Gregory Peck … Sort Of.” Jimmy Faulkner's “Mumblings.” 26 June 2003.
www.siteone.com/columns/faulkner
.

Feeney, F. X. “A Tale of Three Parties.” (Review)
Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances and Detractors Recall His Turbulent Career
by George Plimpton.
LA Weekly
, February 1998.
www.laweekly.com
.

“1st Novel Wins Pulitzer Prize.”
The Washington Post
, 12 May 1961, A3.

Gilbert, Jim. “Cold, Cold Mockingbird.”
Mobile Register
, 13 May 2001.

______
. “Cold, Cold Mockingbird: Postscript.”
www.weirdplots.com
. March 2002.

Going, William T. “Truman Capote: Harper Lee's Fictional Portrait of the Artist As an Alabama Child.”
Alabama Review
42.2 (April 1989), 136–49.

Greenhaw, Wayne. “Capote Country,” in
Alabama on My Mind
. Montgomery, AL: Sycamore Press, 1987.

______
. “Learning to Swim,” in
The Remembered Gate: Memoirs by Alabama Writers
, ed. Jay Lamar and Jeanie Thompson. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 2002.

______
. “Teacher and Friend,” in
Alabama on My Mind.
Montgomery, AL: Sycamore Press, 1987.

Grelen, Jay C. “Freaking Out the Talented Harper Lee.”
Sun News
(Myrtle Beach, SC), 31 December 2002, C1.

H., E. L., Jr. “The Obvious Is All Around Us.”
Birmingham News
, 22 April 1962.

Hamner, John T. “This Mockingbird Is a Happy Singer.”
Montgomery Advertiser
, 7 October 1960.

Hansen, Harry. “Miracle of Manhattan—1st Novel Sweeps Board
.” Chicago Tribune
, 14 May 1961, D6.

“Harper Lee Gets Scroll, Tells of Book.”
Birmingham News
, 12 November 1961.

“Harper Lee, Read but Not Heard.”
The Washington Post
, 17 August 1990.

“Harper Lee Twits School Board in Virginia for Ban on Her Novel.”
The New York Times
, 16 January 1966, 82.

“Harper Lee's First Novel Sets the Whole Book World on Fire!” (advertisement).
The New York Times
, 17 July 1960, 228.

Hatoum, Sarah. “Go Set a Watchman by the Numbers: Harper Lee's New Novel Proves Popular, Divisive.”
Library Journal
, 1 September 2015, 14, 16, 17.

Hechinger, Fred M. “Censorship Found on the Increase.”
The New York Times
, 16 September 1986, C7.

Hendrix, Vernon. “Author's Father Proud of ‘Mockingbird' Fame.”
Montgomery Advertiser
, 7 August 1960.

______
. “Firm Gives Books to Monroe County.”
Montgomery Advertiser
, 23 December 1962.

______
. “Harper Lee Cries for Joy at Peck's Winning of Oscar.”
Montgomery Advertiser
, 10 April 1963.

Hodges, Sam. “To Love a Mockingbird.”
Mobile Register
, 8 September 2002.

Hoff, Timothy. “Influences on Harper Lee: An Introduction to the Symposium.”
Alabama Law Review
45 (Winter 1994), 389.

Hoffman, Roy. “Long Lives the Mockingbird.”
The New York Times Book Review
, 9 August 1998, 31.

Hohoff, Tay. “We Get a New Author.”
Literary Guild Book Club Magazine
, August 1960, 3–4.

“Honors Are Given 13 Women by Mount Holyoke College.”
The New York Times
, 11 November 1962, 53.

“John Megna, 42, ‘Mockingbird' Star.”
The New York Times
, 7 September 1995, B17.

Johnson, Claudia Durst. “The Secret Courts of Men's Hearts: Code and Law in Harper Lee's
To Kill a Mockingbird
.”
Studies in American Fiction
19 (Autumn 1991), 129–39.

Johnson, Hubert A.
To Kill a Mockingbird
, uncorrected proof, printed Spring 1960, Special Collections, University of Virginia.

Jones, George Thomas. “Courthouse Lawn Was Once Kids' Playground,” in
Happenings in Old Monroeville.
Volume 2. Monroeville, AL: Bolton Newspapers, 2003.

______
. “Queen of the Tomboys.”
Monroe Journal
, 6 May 1999.

______
. “Stand Up, Monroeville, Gregory Peck Is Passin',” in
Happenings in Old Monroeville.
Volume 2. Monroeville, AL: Bolton Newspapers, 2003.

______
. “Young Harper Lee's Affinity for Fighting.” EducETH.ch (The English Page). 7 December 1999.
www.educeth.ch/english/readinglist/leeh/remin.html#fight
.

Jubera, Drew. “‘Mockingbird' Still Sings Despite Silence of Author Harper Lee.”
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
, 26 August 1990, M1, M3.

______
. “To Find a Mockingbird.”
Dallas Times Herald
, n.d. (1984).

Keith, Don Lee. “An Afternoon with Harper Lee.”
Delta Review
(Spring 1966), 40–41, 75, 81–82.

Kemp, Kathy. “Mockingbird Won't Sing.”
News & Observer
(Raleigh, NC), 12 November 1997, E1.

Krebs, Albin. “Truman Capote Is Dead at 59; Novelist of Style and Clarity.”
The New York Times
, 28 August 1984.

Lapsley, James N. “Cultural Alienation:
In Cold Blood
.”
Theology Today,
July 1966, 210–15.

Lawrence, Wes. “Author's Problem: Friends.”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
, 17 March 1964.

Lazenby, Permilia S. “First United Methodist Church, Monroeville, Alabama: History” (church booklet). n.p., 1979.

Lee, Gus.
Honor and Duty.
Reprint, New York: Ivy Books, 1994.

Lee, Harper. “Springtime.”
Monroe Journal
, 1 April 1937, 3.

______
. “Nightmare.”
Prelude
, Spring 1945, 11.

______
. “A Wink at Justice.”
Prelude
, Spring 1945, 14–15.

______
. “Some Writers of Our Times.”
Rammer Jammer
, November 1945, 14.

______
. “What Price Registration?”
Crimson White
, 13 June 1946, 2.

______
. “Caustic Comment” (column).
Crimson White
, 28 June 1946, 2 August 1946, 16 August 1946.

______
. “Now Is the Time for All Good Men” (one-act play).
Rammer Jammer
, October 1946, 7, 17–18.

______
. “Alabama Authors Write of Slaves, Women, GIs.”
Crimson White
, 1 October 1946, 2.

______
. “Christmas Means to Me.”
McCall's
, December 1961, 63.

Other books

The Shadow by James Luceno
Drums Along the Mohawk by Walter D. Edmonds
Hidden Mortality by Maggie Mundy
A Brush With Love by Rachel Hauck
ROCKY MOUNTAIN REVENGE by CINDI MEYERS
The Mage of Trelian by Michelle Knudsen
The Fourth Protocol by Frederick Forsyth
Delicious! by Ruth Reichl
Mrs. Grant and Madame Jule by Jennifer Chiaverini