Mockingbird chosen as America’s best-loved novel
Novel beats out Austen, Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter series
LOS ANGELES — To Kill a Mock
ingbird, a coming-of-age story about racism and injustice, overpowered wizards and time travellers to be voted America’s best-loved novel by readers nationwide.
The 1960 book by Harper Lee emerged as No. 1 in PBS’s The
Great American Read survey, whose results were announced Tuesday on the show’s finale. More than four million votes were cast in the six-month-long contest that put 100 titles to the test. Books that were published as a series counted as a single entry. The other top five finishers in order of votes were Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series about a time-spanning love; J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter boy wizard tales; Jane Austen’s romance Pride and Prejudice; and J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the
Rings fantasy saga. Turns out the contest was a Mockingbird runaway. “The novel started out at No. 1 on the first day of the vote and it never wavered,” series host Meredith Vieira said.
Joining her to sing the book’s praises was writer Aaron Sorkin, whose adaptation of Mock- ingbird starts Broadway previews next month, and cast members. Sorkin ( The West Wing, The Social Network) said reading Lee’s novel was his first brush with “astonishing writing.”
“There is soul-crushing injustice in this book that still exists,” he said. “And at the centre, morality, decency and what it is to be a person strikes us.”
LaTanya Richardson Jackson, who portrays Calpurnia in the play, marvelled at Lee’s achievement. “I was most impressed that a woman wrote that way” during that era, the actress said, and that Lee was so “deeply involved on the right side of right.”
Lee’s slender, Pulitzer Prizewinning novel proved enduring enough to overcome the popularity of hefty epics adapted as blockbuster movie franchises (the Potter and Tolkien works) or for TV ( Outlander). Even Pride and Prejudice, the 200year-old inspiration for numerous TV and movie versions, and with an army of “Janeites” devoted to Austen and her work, couldn’t best Lee’s novel.
To Kill a Mockingbird has sold more than 40 million copies worldwide and remains a fixture on school reading lists. The 1962 screen adaptation won three Oscars, including a Best Actor trophy for Gregory Peck’s portrayal of Atticus Finch.
Set in the 1930s South, the book centres on lawyer Finch and his children, daughter Scout and son Jem. When Finch defends an AfricanAmerican man falsely accused of assaulting a white woman, the trial and its repercussions open Scout’s eyes to the world around her, good and bad. Lee’s second published novel, Go Set a Watchman, was written in the 1950s before Mockingbird but is essentially a sequel. After being put aside by the author, it was rediscovered and released in 2015. Lee died the next year at age 89. Besides the TV series, The Great American Read initiative included a 50,000-member online book club and video content across PBS platforms, Facebook and YouTube that drew more than five million views.