Harper Lee's Journey to 'To Kill a Mockingbird'

619 Words2 Pages

Harper Lee had received several rejection letters when trying to publish her book “To Kill a Mockingbird”. In 1957, Tay Hohoff , an editor, wrote about his encounter with Harper. He wrote about how she went worked eight years as an airline reservation agent to support herself whiling writing a novel and film that eventually became a phenomenon. The book was based on Harpers childhood and her life. Her dad, a southern lawyer, refused to see things in black and white. An extraordinary act of friendship was the reason “To Kill a Mockingbird” exist. Harper went and stayed with her close friends Joy and Michael Brown. She visited them a few days a week. Joy and Michael had two little boys that Harper baby sat. When Joy and Michael saved some …show more content…

It gave me more back ground on the book, and I am convinced that Harper wrote this book based on her life experiences. Harper was a hard working and kind woman. I thought the video was very well presented. I really enjoy how the video shows the significance of Boo Radley. The boy that lived in the creepy house was Son Bowler. Boo Radley name is mentioned many tmes in the video about how he kept coming back and made the book very dramatic. I enjoyed how they stated that the book was a great act of protest for the south. Everyone thought the book was a post civil rights novel; however, it was published before the civil rights movement and helped bring it on. Schools, restaurants, buses, churches and neighborhoods were segregated at that time. People who had encountered the Ku Klux Klan were thankful that someone from the deep south gave them a book that let everyone know how they were being treated. I also liked how the video stated that the one very powerful thing about the book was that it was such an indictment of racism, it really was not because there was an understanding that was the normal then, and for someone to rebel or stand against that was exceptional. I think the book really did help whites to understand what was wrong with the system, and it being told from a child point of view really touched everyone who has read the

Open Document