when the morning news brings harper lee
by bam
this old house will be a newspaper house as long as fish wrap is dotted with ink. every morning, seven mornings a week, the first sound that reverberates around here — save for the pre-dawn robins who rev up their vocal cords — is the THWOP! of rolled-up papers plopped onto the front stoop (three separate wads each weekday and saturday, two on sundays). twice a year, when the bill comes due, a bill that topples into the hundreds for all that fish wrap, there’s no discussion. we don’t debate the wisdom of rolling out hard-earned cash for an inflow of ink and paper. because you never know what the news will bring. and we couldn’t live without the possibility of getting lost in sentences that swoop our hearts away. or the joy of flipping through a section and discovering a story we otherwise never would have tumbled upon. or the raw eruption of hot tears spilling on the page, as some account of awfulness carries us miles and miles from where we’re reading, and into dingy corners we’d not know were it not for the newspaper’s insistence on wiping out our ignorance and insouciance.
heck, this old house and half the people in it were practically built on the backs of newsprint. were it not for one chicago tribune’s newsroom, i never would have spied — and uncannily fallen hard for — the lanky fellow who became my lifelong paladin, and the father to our children (the two we call our only “double-bylines”).
still, not every morning brings what this one did; these words from the one spooning oat-y Os into his hungry gullet: “you’re gonna go nuts over this one.” and then he shoved before my eyes the front page of the wall street journal’s friday arts-and-culture section.
“the first chapter of harper lee’s new book,” he mumbled between Os, lest i miss the red-hot scoop, the unparalleled capital-e Exclusive, the biggest leak in publishing in plenty a while, the newspaper’s literary splash four days in advance of tuesday’s worldwide release of what’s being called the reclusive ms. lee’s “new novel.”
actually, it’s harper lee’s old novel, “go set a watchman,” her first go-around with a manuscript, submitted back in 1957, when she was all of 31, to her new york publisher, j.b. lippincott.
as the book-peddling legend goes, ms. lee’s editor back then found the story “lacking,” and advised that the would-be author instead zero in on the flashback scenes, in what would become the searing tale of scout and dill and jem and atticus finch and boo radley, and racial inequity and empathy played out in small-town maycomb, alabama: “to kill a mockingbird,” the pulitzer-prize winner that went on to be named “the 20th-century’s best novel,” according to a vote taken by the nation’s librarians.
and so, before my first sip of coffee this morning, i was riding the rails with jean louise finch, aka the “scout” of mockingbird fame, as she “watched the last of georgia’s hills recede and the red earth appear, and with it tin-roofed houses set in the middle of swept yards, and in the yards the inevitable verbena grew, surrounded by whitewashed tires.”
i admit to having been among the skeptical when news of this “long-lost discovery” first made headlines. i admit to suspicion when word leaked out that the 89-year-old ms. lee’s not-long-out-of-law-school attorney just happened to find the manuscript tucked away in a safe deposit box, shortly after ms. lee’s 103-year-old sister, lawyer and lifelong protector, alice lee, had died. i worried that the not-altogether-with-it nelle harper lee might have been duped. coerced into publishing something she’d not wanted paraded through the glaring light of day, to say nothing of the folderol and zaniness sure to come after a half-century’s literary silence.
well, i’ve now read every word, every word the wall street journal rolled into print, and i’m here to tell you i’ll be among the ones in line to gobble up the next however many chapters ms. lee has lobbed our way. whoever was that long-ago lippincott editor who found the first-go lacking, i beg to differ. i’d not want to miss the chance to drink in a line like this one: “love whom you will but marry your own kind was a dictum amounting to instinct within her.”
or: “she was a person who, when confronted with an easy way out, always took the hard way. the easy way out of this would be to marry hank and let him labor for her. after a few years, when the children were waist-high, the man would come along whom she should have married in the first place. there would be searchings of hearts, fevers and frets, long looks at each other on the post office steps, and misery for everybody. the hollering and the high-mindedness over, all that would be left would be another shabby little affair a la birmingham country club set, and a self-constructed private gehenna with the latest westinghouse appliances. hank didn’t deserve that.
“no. for the present she would pursue the stony path of spinsterhood.”
dare you not to race out to add your name to the long list at the library, or order up your own copy from your nearest most beloved bookseller.
i for one will be inhaling every line, on the lookout for a passage equal to the one i just might call the greatest american paragraph ever penned, the one that makes my heart roar every time.
for the sheer joy of retyping its every word, here is one walloping passage from atticus finch’s closing argument in his defense of a black man wrongly accused of raping a white girl in the deep south of the 1930s. page 233 in my first perennial classics edition, printed in 2002:
“But there is one way in this country in which all men are created equal — there is one human institution that makes a pauper the equal of a Rockefeller, the stupid man the equal of an Einstein, and the ignorant man the equal of any college president. That institution, gentlemen, is a court. It can be the Supreme Court of the United States or the humblest J.P. court in the land, or this honorable court which you serve. Our courts have their faults, as does any human institution, but in this country our courts are the great levelers, and in our courts all men are created equal.”
heck, the whole closing argument — from the bottom of page 230, clear through to the fourth to last sentence on 234 — the whole magnificent thing was enough to make me a lifelong believer in the pen of harper lee. and the wall street journal’s gift this morning — slick as it was for the newspaper owned by the same outfit as lee’s new publisher, HarperCollins, to steal first crack at the watchman — twas a mighty fine one.
and an indelible reminder of why i’ll forever be a girl with ink pumping through her veins.
what’s your favorite line, or scene, or passage, from mockingbird?
and, for your summer reading’s consideration, here’s how the journal lays out the launch of ms. lee’s latest, under the news headline, “scout comes home”:
“The first chapter of ‘Go Set a Watchman’ introduces Ms. Lee’s beloved character, Scout, as a sexually liberated woman in her twenties, traveling from New York to Alabama to visit her ailing father and weigh a marriage proposal from a childhood friend. It also includes a bombshell about Scout’s brother.”
i’ll let you read for yourself and discover that bombshell…..oh, the joy of a byline we thought we’d never see again, one that bears the name harper lee.
Love that ink pumps through your veins. Love that you and your sweetheart call your children your only double by-lines!! Love Harper Lee, always have, and like you, I cannot wait to read her newly-published, old manuscript. xox
we need to make this the title for our summer book club, the one that we just launched…..
Love that you’ll “forever be a girl with ink pumping through her veins.” Grateful for you, Barbara!
oh my. well, when i wrote yesterday’s post i had only read what’s available for plain old anybodies to read: the first chapter, reprinted in the wall street journal. this morning’s THWOP on the front porch brings a front-page review in the new york times, and it’s one that has my stomach reeling. it couldn’t come at a worse time in our national conversation, i suppose, and the word from the times’ literary critic, michiko kakutani, is devastating:
“Shockingly, in Ms. Lee’s long-awaited novel, “Go Set a Watchman,” (due out Tuesday), Atticus is a racist who once attended a Klan meeting…”
i cannot even bring myself to retype the rest of michiko’s sentence, and i sit here frankly sickened. over the course of the review — and unlike you or me, michiko has read every last page — she writes that atticus “becomes the source of grievous pain and disillusionment for the 26-year-old Scout,” and tells us that Scout, who’s come home to Maycomb, Ala., from New York City, “tries to grapple with her dismaying realizations that Atticus and her longtime boyfriend, Henry Clinton, both have abhorrent views on race and segregation.”
it’s a fascinating, disturbing review — more book report that straight-up review. and you can find it here. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/11/books/review-harper-lees-go-set-a-watchman-gives-atticus-finch-a-dark-side.html?_r=0
i am rethinking whether i’ll buy it. i want to believe in my heroes, and have them live happily ever after. atticus has long been a hero, and i don’t know if i can stand to read the rest of his story…..
on the other hand, michiko writes that “students of writing will find ‘Watchman’ fascinating” for questions of characters’ evolution from one book to the next, and narrative transformation from one “filled with characters spouting hate speech — from the causally patronizing to the disgustingly grotesque,” mutate into a “redemptive novel associated with the civil rights movement…”
i’ll be curious to hear your thoughts. disturbing, indeed….
It’s a tough one, isn’t it? I think I’d find it interesting as a study in how a book — well, not just any book — finally makes it to print. What a transformation! How her editor managed to get her from “Watchman” to “Mockingbird” — I’m rather in awe of that.
Oops, didn’t mean to post under the nom de plume!
totally intrigued by this piece of it, for certain. also, just came across this fascinating read, from the new republic, maintaining that there’s a body of research across the years from scholars maintaining that atticus has always had threads that might be pegged racist.
here’s the link. fascinating read…http://www.newrepublic.com/article/122295/these-scholars-have-been-pointing-out-atticus-finchs-racism-years