Gulf Today

New book shows personal side of ‘Mockingbir­d’ author Harper Lee

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HOMEWOOD:TO the world, Harper Lee was aloof to the point of being unknowable, an obsessivel­y private person who spent most of her life avoiding the public gaze despite writing one of the best-selling books ever, “To Kill a Mockingbir­d.” To Wayne Flynt, the Alabama-born author was his friend, Nelle. Flynt, a longtime Southern historian who became close friends with Nelle Harper Lee late in her life, has writen his second book about the author, “Aternoons with Harper Lee,” which was released recently with Flynt signing copies at a bookstore in suburban Birmingham. Based on Flynt’s notes from dozens of visits with Lee over a decade before her death in 2016, the book is like siting on a porch and hearing tales of Lee’s childhood and family in rural Alabama, her later life in New York and everything in between.

That includes the time a grandfathe­r who fought for the Confederac­y survived the Batle of Getysburg despite heavy losses to his Alabama unit, according to Flynt. “I told her, ‘You know, half the 15th of Alabama was either killed or wounded or captured, and he got away? Is that just luck or the providence of God? What in the world is that?’” Flynt said in an interview with The Associated Press.

“And she said, ‘No, it’s not the providence of God. He could run fast.’” The public perception of Lee as a hermit is wrong, Flynt said. No, she didn’t do media interviews and she guarded her privacy zealously, but she also was warm and kind to friends that included a former first lady, Lady Bird Johnson, Flynt said. And Lee was “deeply religious” in a way many people aren’t, he said. “It’s an atempt to tell the story of the authentic woman, not the marble lady,” Flynt said. The book also is a tribute to Flynt’s late wife Dartie, who died in 2020. Lee, who suffered a stroke in 2007, seemed to identify with the physical travails of Dartie Flynt, who had Parkinson’s disease, Flynt said.

“I think she tolerated me because she loved Dartie,” he said. Born in 1926 when the South was still racially segregated by law, Lee grew up in the south Alabama town of Monroevill­e, the daughter of a lawyer who served as a model for atorney Aticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbir­d,” a story of race, injustice and the law during the Jim Crow era. The town itself became Maycomb, the book’s seting.

Preferring football, sotball, golf and books to small-town social affairs or college sororities, Lee’s well-known desire for privacy may have come in part from a feeling of being different from others growing up around her in the South, Flynt said.

“I think she occupied a world where she felt she was not like other girls,” he said. A childhood friend of fellow author Truman Capote, Lee was rarely heard from in public ater her partly autobiogra­phical “Mockingbir­d” won the Pulitzer Prize in 1961 and was made into a hit movie. She mostly lived in an apartment in Manhatan, where it was easier to blend in than back home until the stroke let her partially paralyzed.

Flynt and his late wife knew Lee’s two sisters, and they became close to the author ater she returned to Alabama for good following the stroke. They visited her at a rehabilita­tion center in Birmingham and then at an assisted living home in Monroevill­e, where she spent years before her death. Lee died just months ater the release of her novel “Go Set a Watchman,” which actually was an early version of “Mockingbir­d.”

The book doesn’t get into the most private aspects of Lee’s life; Flynt said they simply didn’t discuss such things. But it does recount her worsening isolation from deafness and blindness toward the end of her life; her love of gambling; the furore over “Watchman” and her authorship of a still-unpublishe­d manuscript about a bizarre murder case in central Alabama.

Lee was steeped in literature and religion, Flynt said. She preferred the King James Version of the Bible to all others for its lyrical language, he said, and her favourite authors included Jane Austen and C.S. Lewis. “When she died, on her otoman in her litle two rooms, was the complete anthology of all of C.S. Lewis’ books. It must have weighed 50 pounds,” he said.

“Aternoons With Harper Lee” is a followup to Flynt’s “Mockingbir­d Songs: My Friendship with Harper Lee.” While the first book was based on leters between the two, the new book is more meandering and conversati­onal than the first in the tradition of Southern storytelli­ng. “The leters are lifeless compared to the stories,” he said.

“To Kill a Mockingbir­d” is considered one of the great classics of 20th century American literature, and is standard reading in classrooms across the world. Published in 1960 and drawn from Lee’s own experience­s as a child, it came to define racial injustice in the Depression-era South. It tells the story of a black man wrongly accused of raping a white woman and the courageous lawyer, Aticus Finch, who defies his community to defend him. The novel sold 30 million copies and earned huge critical acclaim, winning Lee a Pulitzer prize in 1961 and thrusting her into an avalanche of publicity. Her fame was sealed when the novel was adapted into a Hollywood film that won three Academy Awards in 1963, including an Oscar for Gregory Peck for his portrayal of Finch, one of the bestloved characters in American fiction.

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Wayne Flynt signs a copy of his book, ‘Afternoons with Harper Lee,’ at a book-signing function in Homewood, Alabama, on Sept. 22, 2022.
± Wayne Flynt signs a copy of his book, ‘Afternoons with Harper Lee,’ at a book-signing function in Homewood, Alabama, on Sept. 22, 2022.
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The cover of ‘Afternoons with Harper Lee’ by Flynt.
Associated Press Associated Press ± The cover of ‘Afternoons with Harper Lee’ by Flynt.

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