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Mockingbird Next Door: Life With Harper Lee by Marja MillsMockingbird Next Door: Life With Harper Lee by Marja Mills



I have grown to like audio books again.  I stopped listening to them when I stopped having to commute to work.  However, I now find they are also great when I am spending a lot of time in the kitchen or soaking in the bathtub.  So, when I ran across an electronic copy of ‘Mockingbird Next Door’ through my local library’s website, I couldn’t  resist.

‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ by Harper Lee was published in 1960, 3 years before I was born.  If you were born and raised in the United States, chances are that it was required reading in your high school.  It certainly was in mine.  However, my family had a healthy book collection in the large built in bookcase in our basement.  Books added up between my parents and three much older siblings.  I never seemed to be able to get enough to read as a child and was often browsing books to find something to read next.

The cover had a girl on it so I mistook it for a kids book and started reading it.  I was in 5th grade.  My parents never restricted my reading to “age appropriate” books.  I devoured ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’! 

In high school, I was so excited to get the opportunity to discuss it with my teacher and classmates.  However, because I confessed that I already read it, my teacher gave me a different book to read as well  This happened a lot, all through high school.  I was in honors classes but still found that I had already read many of the books assigned.

My point is, I loved ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’!  I’ve read it three times and plan to read it a fourth before I read ‘Go Set a Watchman’ that was recently published.

It is well know that Harper Lee stopped talking to the press and making appearance in 1965.  So when I ran across this biography, I figured it was unauthorized.  So, of course, I Googled it.  The author,  Marja Mills claims that she had Harper Lee’s permission to write and publish it but Lee was quoted as denying that.  No matter, she did give Marja Mills permission to move into the house next door to hers in Mobile, Alabama and did become friends with her.  So much so, that she was invited into Harper and her sister, Alice’s, close circle of friends.  Harper Lee also knew that she was writing a book about her.  I can’t say that was giving permission or not but I certainly don’t feel guilty for listening to the audio book.

I really liked ‘Mockingbird Next Door’.  It was the perfect audio book to unwind with in the bath.  It wasn’t too serious, instead it sounded more like friends getting together for dinner or coffee, which  happened a lot in the book.  It certainly wasn’t ground breaking.  Ms. Mills talked about the Lee’s childhood including Harper, actually known as Nelle Lee, her sisters Alice and Louise. She also talked about what Nelle did before she wrote the book and her part in the making of the movie.

Nelle became friends with Gregory Peck and they kept in touch even after the filming.  There were a bunch of little tidbits in the book but mostly common knowledge.  Yet I found comfort in it. As Mills often quoted Nelle as saying about certain things, “it’s delicious.”  

Would I have liked more nuts and bolts/new information?  Yes, it would have been nice.  However, I didn’t really criticise it for that.  It kept me engaged, was well written, and to my mind, respectful.  To me, respectful is the most important element in a biography like this.  I also really enjoyed the smooth voice of the narrator, Amy Lynn Stewart.

If you are interested in Harper Lee, I do recommend that you read or listen to this book.  If you do, come back and let me know your thoughts.

Have you read ‘Mockingbird Next Door’?  If so, what do you think of it?

4/5

About Marja MillsMockingbird Next Door: Life With Harper Lee by Marja Mills


Marja Mills is a former reporter and feature writer for the Chicago Tribune, where she was a member of the staff that won a Pulitzer Prize for a 2001 series about O’Hare Airport entitled “Gateway to Gridlock.” The Mockingbird Next Door is her first book.

Mills was born and raised in Madison, Wisconsin.  She is a 1985 graduate of Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service; a lifelong interest in other cultures led to studies in Paraguay, Spain and Sweden.  Mills lives in downtown Chicago and often spends time in Madison and her father’s hometown of Black River Falls, Wisconsin, pop. 3,500.

Blaine HardenThanks to Andrea Lam of Viking/Penguin Books., I am giving away one print copy of The Great Leader And The Fighter Pilot by North Korea expert, Blaine Harden.

Book Description:


From the bestselling author of Escape from Camp 14, the murderous rise of North Korea’s founding dictator and the fighter pilot who faked him out

In The Great Leader and the Fighter Pilot, New York Times bestselling author Blaine Harden tells the riveting story of how Kim Il Sung grabbed power and plunged his country into war against the United States while the youngest fighter pilot in his air force was playing a high-risk game of deception—and escape.

As Kim ascended from Soviet puppet to godlike ruler, No Kum Sok noisily pretended to love his Great Leader. That is, until he swiped a Soviet MiG-15 and delivered it to the Americans, not knowing they were offering a $100,000 bounty for the warplane (the equivalent of nearly one million
dollars today). The theft—just weeks after the Korean War ended in July 1953—electrified the world and incited Kim’s bloody vengeance.

During the Korean War the United States brutally carpet bombed the North, killing hundreds of thousands of civilians and giving the Kim dynasty, as Harden reveals, the fact-based narrative it would use to this day to sell paranoia and hatred of Americans.

Drawing on documents from Chinese and Russian archives about the role of Mao and Stalin in Kim’s shadowy rise, as well as from neverbefore- released U.S. intelligence and interrogation files, Harden gives us a heart-pounding escape adventure and an entirely new way to understand the world’s longest-lasting totalitarian state.

About Blaine Harden:Blaine Harden


BLAINE HARDEN is the author of Africa: Dispatches from a Fragile ContinentA River Lost: The Life and Death of the Columbia; and Escape from Camp 14: One Man’s Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the WestAfrica won a PEN American Center citation for first book of nonfiction. Escape from Camp 14 was both a New York Times and an international bestseller published in twenty-seven languages. Harden formerly served as The Washington Post’s bureau chief in East Asia, Eastern Europe and Africa. He lives in Seattle.

This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on April 2, 2015.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.

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Chaucer's_TaleThanks to Justine Sha of Viking/ Penguin, I am giving away one print copy of ‘Chaucer’s Tale’.

Book Description:

A lively microbiography of Chaucer that tells the story of the tumultuous year that led to the creation of ‘The Canterbury Tales’.

In 1386, Geoffrey Chaucer endured his worst year, but began his best poem. The father of English literature did not enjoy in his lifetime the literary celebrity that he
has today—far from it. The middle-aged Chaucer was living in London, working as a midlevel bureaucrat and sometime poet, until a personal and professional
crisis set him down the road leading to The Canterbury Tales.

In the politically and economically fraught London of the late fourteenth century, Chaucer was swept up against his will in a series of disastrous events that would ultimately leave him jobless, homeless, separated from his wife, exiled from his city, and isolated in the countryside of Kent—with no more audience to hear the
poetry he labored over.

At the loneliest time of his life, Chaucer made the revolutionary decision to keep writing, and to write for a national audience, for posterity, and for fame.

Brought expertly to life by Paul Strohm, this is the eye-opening story of the birth one of the most celebrated literary creations of the English language.

About Paul Strohm:

Photo Credit Nigel Whitmey

PAUL STROHM has been J.R.R. Tolkien Professor of English at the University of Oxford and Garbedian Professor of the Humanities at Columbia University. He has previously been departmental Chair and President of the Faculty Council at Indiana University, and has held various national offices and posts with the American Association of University Professors. Author of acclaimed scholarly volumes, he now tackles a new assignment: telling Chaucer’s story to a new and more general audience that loves literature but hasn’t specialized in the middle ages.  He divides his time between Brooklyn and Oxford, England.

This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on December 5, 2014.  Please use Rafflecpter to enter.

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