ya/teen

Five For Friday — Book Suggestions For All Ages

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I get asked for book recommendations all the time, so I’ve decided to start a regular post every Friday in which I recommend five books that I really love.  I’m going to split the list up by age and reading level that way there will be a little something for everyone.  

I’m listing five of my all time favortites for this first week.  Happy reading!

 

Ages 3 – 5

Moo, Baa, La, La, La! by Sandra Boyton.  Serious silliness for all little ones.  A comedy of errors for preschoolers.  Young children find this book totally delightful.  It all starts with –

“A cow says MOO.”

“A sheep says BAA.”

“Three singing pigs say LA LA LA!”

“‘No, no!’ you say, ‘that isn’t right.

The pigs say OINK all day and night.’”

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Ages 5 – 7

Miss Daisy is Crazy by Dan Gutman.  Dan Gutman has written two gazillion books for young readers.  This is the first book in the popular “Weird School” series that emerging readers find funny and engaging.  Great for both boys and girls. 

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Ages 7 – 9

Weird But True: 300 Outrageous Facts.  Well did you know that… Peanut butter can be converted into a diamond? The world’s oldest pet goldfish lived to be 43 years old? On Neptune, the wind blows up to 1,243 miles an hour? An elephant’s tooth can weigh as much as a bowling ball?  This fun fact book published by NatGeo will provide many hours of fun for kids and adults alike.  

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Ages 9 -12 

The Strange Case of Origami Yoda by Tom Angleberger.  Um, actually, this isn’t exactly a “Stars Wars” story (but your little Star Wars fans don’t need to know that).  The plot is something of a philosophical conundrum for kids.  I love this little book and recommend it whenever I get the chance.  In fact, I did a previous review that you can read here.

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What I’m reading

Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt.  My intention was to recommend a grown up book here, but truthfully, this week I’m in the middle of this compelling YA (11 and up) novel.  Gary Schmidt is a new author to me, and I plan to get his award winning “Wednesday Wars” after I finish this book.

By Lisa Dalesandro/@abookmama
Author of “Raise a Reader: 25 Effective Ways to Get Kids Reading”
      

Yes, It’s True. I Let My 10-Year-Old Read “The Hunger Games”

 

By Lisa Dalesandro/@abookmama
Author of “Raise a Reader: 25 Effective Ways to Get Kids Reading”

Literacy and the Hunger Games

         The whole dilemma started in ballet class. My daughter is part of a dance company comprised of girls between the ages of 9 and 16.  It was those darn teenagers that got us into trouble. 

         Apparently in the dressing room, the older girls had been talking excitedly about how much they love “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins (a book the publishers recommend for 7th grade and up) and how eager they were to see the upcoming film.  Naturally, this made my little 4th grader desperate to see what all the fuss was about.

        As soon as she asked me if she could read the book, I had one of those parental moments where time and space instantly freeze.  You know what I’m talking about, that split second where your brain shifts into high gear trying to work out the correct response before your child gets a whiff of your fear and the fact that you really don’t have a clue.

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Who really wrote “To Kill A Mockingbird?”

Harper Lee's award winning novel

"Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit 'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a mockingbird."

Harper Lee did.  Right?

In 8th grade, I wrote my first major English lit paper on To Kill a Mockingbird.  Even then my middle-school-aged brain was intrigued by a mysterious question that has quietly puzzled the literary world for some 50 years.

Why hasn’t Harper Lee written another book?

This past July marked the 50th anniversary of the publication of the book a poll of librarians at the Library Journal called the “Best Novel of the Century.”  The film adaptation was nominated for eight Academy Awards and went on to win three.  Demi Moore named a daughter after the book’s feisty narrator Scout.  Oprah even called To Kill A Mockingbird our national book.

Come on!  What more proof do you need that it is perhaps our great American novel?

More →

"Life of Pi" by Yann Martel

I didn’t see it coming.  The ending took me completely by surprise.  Which I admit seems silly in hindsight.  I can only postulate that I became so intimately bonded to Pi and Richard Parker that it never occurred to me to consider any alternate reality.  Simply, I wanted it to be true.

Yann Martel’s imaginative and unforgettable Life of Pi (12 and up) is a magical reading experience, an endless blue expanse of storytelling about adventure, survival, and faith.

The precocious son of a zookeeper, 16-year-old Pi Patel is raised in Pondicherry, India, where he tries on various faiths for size, attracting “religions the way a dog attracts fleas.” Planning a move to Canada, his father packs up the family and their menagerie and they hitch a ride on an enormous freighter.

Peter Kasim

After a harrowing shipwreck, Pi finds himself adrift in the Pacific Ocean, trapped on a 26-foot lifeboat with a wounded zebra, a spotted hyena, a seasick orangutan, and a 450-pound Bengal tiger named Richard Parker , “His head was the size and color of the lifebuoy, with teeth.”

It sounds like a colorful setup, but these wild beasts don’t burst into song as if co-starring in an anthropomorphized Disney feature. After much gore and infighting, Pi and Richard Parker remain the boat’s sole passengers, drifting for 227 days through shark-infested waters while fighting hunger, the elements, and an overactive imagination.

In rich, hallucinatory passages, Pi recounts the harrowing journey as the days blur together, elegantly cataloging the endless passage of time and his struggles to survive: “It is pointless to say that this or that night was the worst of my life. I have so many bad nights to choose from that I’ve made none the champion.”

At one point in his journey, Pi recounts, “My greatest wish–other than salvation–was to have a book. A long book with a never-ending story. One that I could read again and again, with new eyes and fresh understanding each time.” It’s safe to say that this heartbreaking fable Life of Pi is such a book.  (amazon review)

This gorgeous tale is on my top-ten list.  A word of warning — this beautiful but brutal tale is not for the overly sensitive teen.  Or adult, I guess.

"Evil Genius" by Catherine Jinks

Who doesn’t love a great anti-hero?  Evil Genius by Catherine Jinks (11 and up) introduces us to the notorious but lonely Cadel Piggott who could easily be pals with Artemis Fowl or Draco Malfoy.

At age seven child, prodigy Cadel finds himself in a shrink’s office for illegal computer hacking.  Child psychologist Thaddeus Roth privately delivers startling counsel, “Next time, don’t get caught.”

As it turns out, Thaddeus is actually an agent of Cadel’s real father,Dr. Phineas Darkkon, a brilliant criminal mastermind who’s been imprisoned for years.  Darkkon arranges to place Cadel at the secret “Axis Institute for World Domination” founded by himself and run by Thaddeus.

By age  fourteen, Cadel, along with a colorful cast of evil comic-book-like fellow student, are studying for their World Domination degree, taking classes in embezzlement, forgery, and infiltration at the institute.

Although Cadel may be intellectually advanced beyond his years, at heart he’s a lonely kid who doesn’t fit in with his peers.  When he falls for the mysterious, brilliant and beautiful Kay-Lee, he begins to question the moral implications of his nefarious studies.

But the question remains is it too late to stop his own father, Dr. Darkkon, from carrying out his evil plot?

Young comic-book fans ready for something a little more substantial will enjoy the school’s aspiring villains including one who floors foes with deadly B.O. Cadel’s moral turnabout is convincingly hampered by his difficulty recognizing appropriate outlets for rage.

Over-the-top evil fun with just enough heart to make anyone anyone root for young Cadel.

A Bunch of Things You Didn't Know You Needed to Know About Nancy Drew

The first Nancy Drew book

1.  The fantastic Nancy Drew, girl detective, was created in 1930 by Edward Stratemeyer, founder of the Stratemeyer Syndicate book packaging firm. Stratemeyer had created the Hardy Boys series in 1926 (although the first volumes were not published until 1927). The series had been such a success that he decided to create a similar series for girls, with an amateur girl detective as the heroine.  The books have been ghostwritten by a number of authors and are published under the collective pseudonym Carolyn Keene.

2. Early on, a blonde (!) Nancy Drew was accompanied by a character named Helen Corning on adventures, but soon Helen was replaced by the classic foil characters, Bess Marvin and George Fayne. Bess and George are cousins and help Nancy, whose hair was suddenly described as Titian, solve her mysteries.

3.Nancy Drew made her cinema debut in 1938 and 1939 when Bonita Granville starred in four movies about the teenage detective. Forty years later, Nancy appeared on television in weekly mystery episodes starring Pamela Sue Martin, and later, Janet Louise Johnson.

4.While solving some 500 mysteries since 1930, Nancy Drew’s car has been yellow, green and even maroon.  (Which is funny since I remember it being blue)

Someone buy me a mug!

5. What’s your feeling on a series starring Diana Dare, Stella Strong, Nan Nelson or Helen Hale?  Those are a few names creator Edward Stratemeyer pitched before landing on Nancy Drew. To make matters worse, the first choice was Nan Drew, but his wise editors thought lengthening the name to “Nancy” made it roll off the tongue a little better.

6. Stratemeyer allegedly wrote all of the plot outlines, but he hired someone else to do the actual story writing.  I remember being stunned to discover that Carolyn Keene was a psudenom.  The original writer’s name was Mildred Wirt and she was paid $125 to $250 for each book she wrote. She also received one fifth of the royalties from any book she had written. She didn’t write all of them, but Wirt is largely regarded as having the most influence on how the series was developed.

7. Many very influential, powerful and intelligent women (as well as yours truly) have cited Nancy Drew as one of their favorite book series and even go so far as to say that the character helped them realize that women could do anything. This includes Sandra Day O’Connor, Sonia Sotomayor, Hilary Clinton, Laura Bush, Barbara Walters and Ruth Bader Ginsberg.  All this despite the fact that Stratemeyer firmly stated that a woman’s place was in the home.  Ironically, his two daughters grew up to have controlling stakes in Stratemeyer Syndicate and wrote for various Stratemeyer’s book series, including the Hardy Boys.  Sorry daddy.

8. Stratemeyer Syndicate was responsible for several children’s book series.  So if certain series from the era seem rather formulaic… well, you get the point.  Other Stratemeyer Syndicate series included The Bobbsey Twins, Tom Swift, The Dana Girls Mystery Stories and The Kay Tracey Mysteries.

9. In France, Nancy Drew was renamed Alice Roy; Kitty Drew in Sweden; Paula Drew in Finland; Miss Detective in Norway, although inside the book she’s still known as Nancy.  Strangely in Germany, Nancy is a law student who goes by the name Susanne Langen — uh, shouldn’t that just be a different series?

10. Some guys just can’t take a hint.  Poor Ned Nickerson spends all of his time pining after Nancy, who isn’t nearly as invested in him.  In the first Nancy Drew silver screen adaptation (1938), even his name wasn’t good enough – screenwriters thought the name “Ned” was dated and renamed him “Ted.”  And when Nancy finally goes to college in 1995 in the”Nancy Drew on Campus” series, readers were invited to call a 1-800 number to vote on whether Nancy should keep dating Ned or start playing the field.  Readers overwhelmingly voted for a new boyfriend and the rest of the series featured a new beau named Jake.  Aw, poor Ned.

11. Russell Tandy was the illustrator of the original series, creating dust jackets and internal illustrations for the first 26 books. But that was just one of his gigs: he also drew six Hardy Boys covers, served as a fashion illustrator for high-end department stores, illustrated for Butterick Patterns and also designed the Jantzen swimwear logo. Plus, he had friends in high places: he counted Ernest Hemingway, Salvador Dali and Norman Rockwell among his nearest and dearest.

12. Of all of the Nancy Drew books, sales show that the second book in the series, “The Hidden Staircase”, is the fan favorite. As of 2001, it had sold 1,821,457 copies, making it #68 on a list of top 100 all-time bestselling children’s books. This puts Team Nancy ahead of Eloise, Charlotte’s Web, Yertle the Turtle and Curious George.

13. If you love Nancy Drew you can attend the 2011 Nancy Drew Convention in Charlottesville VA.    You can get more info at http://www.ndsleuths.com/ndsconventions.html

I'm a medium.

14.  If you’re looking for ideas for my Christmas gift, check out Nancy Drew Cafepress store for tons of fun Nancy Drew stuff.  http://www.cafepress.com/nancydrewshop.

Great websites and my sources.

The Nancy Drew SleuthsAround the World with Nancy Drew, Nancy Drew Heaven, The Unofficial Nancy Drew Homepage, Nancy Drew on MysteryNet.com, Mentalfloss  

 

"Stargirl" by Jerry Spinelli

“She was homeschooling gone amok.” “She was an alien.” “Her parents were circus acrobats.”

In “Stargirl” by Jerry Spinelli, these are only a few of the theories concocted to explain Stargirl Caraway, a new 10th grader at Arizona’s Mica Area High School who wears pioneer dresses and kimonos to school, strums a ukulele in the cafeteria, laughs when there are no jokes, and dances when there is no music.

The whole school, not exactly a “hotbed of nonconformity,” is stunned by her, including our 16-year-old narrator Leo Borlock: “She was elusive. She was today. She was tomorrow. She was the faintest scent of a cactus flower, the flitting shadow of an elf owl.”

In time, incredulity gives way to out-and-out adoration as the student body finds itself helpless to resist Stargirl’s wide-eyed charm, pure-spirited friendliness, and penchant for celebrating the achievements of others. In the ultimate high school symbol of acceptance, she is even recruited as a cheerleader.

Popularity, of course, is a fragile and fleeting state, and bit by bit, Mica sours on their new idol. Why is Stargirl showing up at the funerals of strangers? Worse, why does she cheer for the opposing basketball teams? The growing hostility comes to a head when she is verbally flogged by resentful students on Leo’s televised Hot Seat show in an episode that is too terrible to air.

While the playful, chin-held-high Stargirl seems impervious to the shunning that ensues, Leo, who is in the throes of first love (and therefore scornfully deemed “Starboy”), is not made of such strong stuff: “I became angry. I resented having to choose. I refused to choose. I imagined my life without her and without them, and I didn’t like it either way.”

Jerry Spinelli, author of Newbery Medalist Maniac Magee, Newbery Honor Book Wringer, and many other excellent books for teens, elegantly and accurately captures the collective, not-always-pretty emotions of a high school microcosm in which individuality is pitted against conformity.

Spinelli’s Stargirl is a supernatural teen character–absolutely egoless, altruistic, in touch with life’s primitive rhythms, meditative, untouched by popular culture, and supremely self-confident. It is the sensitive Leo whom readers will relate to as he grapples with who she is, who he is, who they are together as Stargirl and Starboy, and indeed, what it means to be a human being on a planet that is rich with wonders. Amazon.com review (Ages 10 to 14)

Best Kids Book Ages 12 and up from The Guardian

From the much-loved classic Tom Sawyer to the modern classic His Dark Materials, Lucy Mangan and Imogen Russell-Williams pick their top reads for children aged 12 and over.

I Capture the Castle: Dodie Smith

The first entry in Cassandra Mortmain’s diary ends with her feeling happier than she ever has in her life, despite her depressed father and impoverished state. “Perhaps it is because I have satisfied my creative urge; or it may be due to the thought of eggs for tea.” The story of the restoration of a degree of the family fortunes unfolds in the same briskly beguiling voice and appeals to the romantic streak in every teenage heart. Trust no one who does not love this or, of course, 101 Dalmatians.

His Dark Materials: Philip Pullman

Bleak, brutal, warm, lush and exhilarating by turns, fiercely intelligent, compassionate and compelling always, it will undo all the harm or all the good you feel was done by letting your offspring loose on Narnia. That’s what reading is for.

 

 

The Chaos Walking trilogy: Patrick Ness

An unbelievably thrilling read that nevertheless poses profound questions – about the effects of war, the constraints of love and hate, the competing claims of vengeance and forgiveness – as the epic tale of Todd’s efforts to escape various warmongering forces unfolds. Profoundly humane and utterly magnificent. More →

LITTLE BROTHER by Cory Doctorow

So we already had a discussion about teen dystopian lit. (see previous post) and how I don’t dig it like the teens do.  But hey! Guess what?  I loved Cory Doctorow’s “Little Brother” which is sort of a futuristic-terrorist-techno fable.  Apparently, the marvelous Neil Gaiman loved it too, so I’m just gonna let you read what he said about it.  (Cause, honestly, who can say it better than Mr. G?)

“A wonderful, important book…I’d recommend Little Brother over pretty much any book I’ve read this year, and I’d want to get it into the hands of as many smart thirteen-year-olds, male and female, as I can. Because I think it’ll change lives. Because some kids, maybe just a few, won’t be the same after they’ve read it. Maybe they’ll change politically, maybe technologically. Maybe it’ll just be the first book they loved or that spoke to their inner geek. Maybe they’ll want to argue about it and disagree with it. Maybe they’ll want to open their computer and see what’s in there. I don’t know. It made me want to be thirteen again right now, and reading it for the first time.” —Neil Gaiman, author of Sandman and American Gods onLittle Brother. More →

Mockingjay plus a quick and easy discussion of dystopian literature

Ah… to be young again and long for a good piece of dystopian literature.

What the heck is dystopian literature, you ask?  Excellent question, grasshopper.

In a nutshell, it’s a potent literary vehicle for criticizing existing social conditions and political systems.  As opposed to utopian literature which portrays an ideal world, dystopian literature depicts the flaws and failures of an imagined and generally exaggerated society.  Fun stuff!

Books like Brave New World, Farenheit 451, V for Vendetta, and most lately The Hunger Games trilogy, fit squarely into that category.

We grownups who fill our days worrying about paying bills, not getting downsized or outsourced and, of course, that small task of raising children, frequently  prefer to reach for a nice happy light piece of beach reading to help us unwind, but apparently the bright shiny youth of today have fallen head over heels for the dystopian trilogy called The Hunger Game by Suzanne Collins.

The last book, Mockingjay, in this trilogy about kids being forced to fight to the death on TV, came out last week to hordes of waiting teens and adults alike.  It instantly shot to the top of the best sellers list.  For those of you more into Jackie Collins than Suzanne Collins, the book’s description goes something like this –

Against all odds, Katniss Everdeen has survived the Hunger Games twice. But now that she’s made it out of the bloody arena alive, she’s still not safe. The Capitol is angry. The Capitol wants revenge. Who do they think should pay for the unrest? Katniss. And what’s worse, President Snow has made it clear that no one else is safe either. Not Katniss’s family, not her friends, not the people of District 12!

I completely understand why those pesky, rebellious teens like a genre dedicated to examining how we adults have seriously screwed up the world that they’re scheduled to inherit one day soon.  But as for me, I think as summer turns to fall, I’ll turn in my beach reading and pick up a copy of Jonathan Franzen’s novel “Freedom” so I can engross myself in the lives of a typical dysfunctional American family.

That’s dystopian enough for me.

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (13 and up) sounds like the sort of book that parents want kids to read but kids actually don’t want anything to do with.  Sort of the literary equivalent of the dull preachy after-school-TV-special.

Luckily, it’s not any of that.

“Arnold Spirit, a goofy-looking dork with a decent  jump shot, spends his time lamenting life on the “poor-ass” Spokane Indian reservation, drawing cartoons, and, along with his aptly named pal Rowdy, laughing those laughs over anything and nothing. When a teacher pleads with Arnold to want more, to escape the hopelessness of the “rez,” Arnold switches to a rich white school and immediately becomes as much an outcast in his own community as he is a curiosity in his new one.”

Beyond being a story about the modern plight of impoverished native Americans, or a story that deals with death (Arnold’s been to 42 funerals) or alcoholism or being bullied or not fitting in or falling in love or coming of age, it’s just a darn good read with moments of unexpected genius.

“I think the world is a series of broken dams and floods,” Arnold says, “and my cartoons are tiny little lifeboats.”

The book is filled with quiet poetry, mainly because Sherman Alexie was originally a poet before he became a novelist.  Alexie, a native American who lived on the “rez” in Spokane, just like Arnold, clearly understands the world he is writing about and faces it with brutal but loving honesty.

Arnold weathers the typical teenage indignations and triumphs like a champ but soon faces far more trying ordeals as his home life begins to crumble and decay amidst the suffocating mire of alcoholism on the reservation. Alexie’s humor and prose are easygoing and well suited to his young audience, and he doesn’t pull many punches as he levels his eye at stereotypes.”  (excerps from booklist)

This book came out a few years ago but it remains a staple in both bookstores and libraries, and likely will continue to do so for many years to come.

I ♥ "Going Bovine." A thinking-teen's novel.

If you’re looking for a smart, entertaining book that will make your teen think then “Going Bovine” by Libba Bray (ages 13 – up; references to sex and drugs) is just what the doctor ordered.

Unfortunately, not far into “Going Bovine” our angst-ridden, 16-year old, slacker of a hero Cameron gets some seriously bad news from his doctor: he’s got Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease.  A.K.A. Mad Cow.  Which totally sucks.

Hope arrives in the winged form of Dulcie, a super hot, cheeky, neon-pink punk angel(or possible hallucination) with a bad sugar habit.  She confides that there’s a secret cure to his otherwise fatal disease—if he’s willing to go in search of it.

With the help of a death-obsessed, video-gaming dwarf and a pint-sized yard gnome, Cameron sets off on the mother of all road trips through a twisted America into the heart of what matters most.

This “quest” story has clear parallels to the hopeless but inspirational efforts of Don Quixote, about whom Cameron had been reading before his illness.

Libba Bray’s voice is strong, confident and clever.  She crafts a road-trip story that is original, laugh-out-loud funny, and gorgeously poignant.

The voice is so fresh, the imagery so intriguing, and the conclusion — inevitable — yet profound leaves one wondering what exactly was reality and what was hallucinatory.

Recommended to teens and adults alike.

It’s not a perfect book.  A bit too long and perhaps a tad too fantastical in places, but Cameron is ultimately a kid with a heart the size of Cleveland.  He will leave the most cynical teen (or adult) thinking about what they’re thankful for and pondering what really matters to them in this mad-cow, crazy world.

From Geek to Gorgeous. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks.

It’s every teenage girl’s dream to come back to school in September having emerged from the chrysalis of summer as a beautiful butterfly. Because naturally, the most popular boy in school will then fall all over himself to go out with you.

But then what?

The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart (12 and up) considers this very scenario.  Set amid the privileged world of an exclusive Eastern boarding school, Frankie discovers that because of her gender she isn’t allowed inside an elite secret society (much like the Skull and Bones at Yale) run by the popular senior boys and headed up by her very own boyfriend.  But what her older, popular boyfriend doesn’t realize is that Frankie is far too clever and resourceful to be left out of the societies’ antics. Unfortunately, in the end, Frankie is left wondering if her triumphs were ever actually triumphs at all.

While the plot is full of mysterious twists and turns, and our heroine is bright and thoughtful, I suspect what girls actually find most intriguing in this novel has more to do with Frankie’s constant musings about boys; old boyfriends, new boyfriends and potential boyfriends.

Perhaps the moral of this story is that even the prettiest, brightest, most promising girls have boy problems too.

Would you retire if your first novel won a Puliter, sold a zillion copies and became an Oscar winning film?

Harper Lee's award winning novel

"Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit 'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a mockingbird."

Harper Lee did.

In 8th grade, I wrote my first major English lit paper on To Kill a Mockingbird.  Even then my middle-school-aged brain was intrigued by a mysterious question that has quietly puzzled the literary world for some 50 years.

Why hasn’t Harper Lee written another book?
This past July marked the 50th anniversary of the publication of the book a poll of librarians at the Library Journal called the “Best Novel of the Century.”  The film adaptation was nominated for eight Academy Awards and went on to win three.  And Demi Moore named a daughter after the book’s feisty narrator Scout.  Oprah even called To Kill A Mockingbird our national book.

Come on!  What more proof do you need?

Set in 1930s depression-era Alabama, To Kill a Mockingbird tells the story of honorable small town lawyer Atticus Finch, who defends a black man falsely accused of rape.  The story is told through the eyes of Atticus’ small tomboy, wiser-than-her-years daughter, Scout.

After the book’s publication in 1960, Harper Lee famously retired to her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama.   Since its publication, Lee has granted almost no requests for interviews or public appearances, and with the exception of a few short essays, including a recent article in Oprah’s O Magazine about her love of reading, has not published anything else.

The legendary author’s last major public appearance was in 2007, when she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom at the White House by President Bush.  True to character, she didn’t say much at that ceremony either.

The question has always been is she or is she not writing a second book?  Perhaps Ms. Lee simply has a 50-year-old case of writer’s block.  Some have speculated that there actually is another novel but it won’t be published until after her death.  Lee’s sister Alice has insisted that there will not be another book.

Supposedly, when a cousin asked Lee when she would produce another book, Lee replied, “When you’re at the top, there’s only one way to go.”

In 1964, Ms. Lee stated in the publication Newquist, “I never expected any sort of success with Mockingbird.  I was hoping for a quick and merciful death at the hands of the reviewers but, at the same time, I sort of hoped someone would like it enough to give me encouragement.  Public encouragement.  I hoped for a little, as I said, but I got rather a whole lot, and in some ways this was just about as frightening as the quick, merciful death I’d expected.”

Legend has it that she did actually work on a second novel — The Long Goodbye — but eventually filed it away as unfinished.  During the mid-1980s, she began a factual book about an Alabama serial murderer, but also put it aside when she was not satisfied.

Another potentially interesting factor comes in the form of a dark and persistent rumor that has shadowed the book since it was published.  Some have postulated that Lee’s long time friend Truman Capote either wrote or heavily edited the book.  The pair grew up together for a time in Alabama, and reunited years later in New York City where Lee worked as a research assistant for Capote.

Evidence that the relationship was significant to both comes in the fact that Lee put Capote in her novel as Dill, the pathological liar and invert. Whereas Capote put Lee in his first novel Other Voices, Other Rooms as Idabel, the most notorious tomboy in the state.

Most literary scholars dismiss the rumor of Capote’s authorship partially based on the fact that Capote, who had an enormous ego and insatiable desire for literary accolade, would never have remained silent had he indeed written the award-winning book.

Mockingbird was published after Lee accompanied Capote to Kansas to help him research an infamous murder that eventually became perhaps his best work In Cold Blood.  Lee’s book won a Pulitzer Prize; Capote’s did not, and he was envious, which damaged their friendship.

It also didn’t help that Capote failed to credit Lee for her contributions to his book, and also failed to deny false rumors that he was the author of Mockingbird. At one point, Capote’s own father publicly inferred that his son had indeed written the book.

This literary mystery has spawned a small movement of its own.  Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story by Kim Powers is a novel that blends fact, speculation and fantasy based on the time Capote and Lee spent working on In Cold Blood.  It’s “a novel about Truman Capote, Harper Lee, and the ghosts of the Clutters, the Kansas farm family murdered fifty years ago, in cold blood. Kim Powers imagines the truths Capote and Lee uncovered in Kansas and kept hidden for years; the rumors and revelations that followed the success of To Kill a Mockingbird, which estranged the former friends; and the confessions Capote makes in his final months that ultimately reunite them.” (from the publisher)

Nevertheless, evidence does suggests that Lee apparently struggled with the novel for years in the 1950s while working at menial jobs in New York.  Then some Alabama friends gave her a Christmas gift of enough money to quit her job and work full-time on the book for a year.

“It was meant to be a gift to her father,” says Charles Shields, author of Mockingbird: A Portrait of Harper Lee.”  She wanted to write a love story from a daughter to a father, who was a great man in a small town and the model for Atticus.” Like Atticus, Harper Lee’s father was a lawyer who once defended black men accused of murder.

Eventually, a bright editor named Tay Hohoff at J.B. Lippincott & Co was able to take Lee’s story and help turn it into the novel we know today.  Lee completed the book in the summer of 1959.

Read by millions, beloved by English teachers and students alike, there are more than 30 million copies of the book in print.  It has never been out of print and nearly 1 million copies are sold every year.  It currently ranks No. 56 on USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list.

In celebration of the 50th anniversary, Lee’s current publisher, HarperCollins, bookstores, libraries and scads of writers and readers across the planet are preparing to give Lee and Mockingbird a grand shout-out this year with new editions, new books, readings and screenings of the 1962 movie.

Will there be another novel?  Doubtful.  Lee, at age 84, appears to be going strong and seems to have no plans to give us another book.  But it’s a delicious little literary mystery that only time will answer.


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