Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Paperback ©2021 | -- |
Lee, Harper. Juvenile literature.
Lee, Harper.
Authors, American. 20th century. Biography. Juvenile literature.
Authors, American. 20th century.
Most young readers won't be familiar with To Kill a Mockingbird, but they'll know what it's like to be a child who has dreams and frustrations, who reads and conspires with friends. So the story of Harper Lee and her Alabama childhood, her friendship with young Truman Capote, and her curiosity and unsettled feelings about the differences between people will draw them in. Because the story is grounded in Lee's childhood, kids will happily follow her into adulthood with her quest for success as well as her inability to handle the fame that accompanies it. Hegedus' narrative is especially well structured. The text is short enough to ensure children don't lose interest, but it's packed with information about Lee while it weaves in threads about the racial practices of the era that inspired her book. The Photoshop illustrations are not as successful. Though the digital art has a spunky feel that represents Lee, it is not balanced by much warmth. Still, a fine choice for picture-book biography shelves, with the author's note addin dimension.
Horn BookThis picture book biography does justice to the spunky, independent writer of To Kill a Mockingbird. Hegedus develops Lee's character and shares the author's childhood influences (including her small-town lawyer father and her friend Truman Capote) who helped shape her groundbreaking novel. Unfortunately, the digital illustrations cheapen the presentation, giving it a cartoonlike look. Websites. Bib.
Kirkus ReviewsA scrappy young white girl from tiny Monroeville, Alabama, grows up to write the American classic To Kill a Mockingbird.Hegedus tells the story of how Nelle Harper Lee became a writer, choosing illustrative moments from her life: watching her lawyer father try cases in court, learning to read by sitting on her father's lap as he read the newspaper, observing racial relations in the town, becoming friends with Truman Capote and writing stories together, editing the college newspaper, and going to New York City, where a Christmas gift of money from friends gave her the time to finally write a novel. It's tricky business to write about an author of a novel young readers haven't encountered yet. Young readers may be content with the inspirational story of a protagonist who "carved out a life of her own design," but only older readers who have read the novel can appreciate scenes related to it. It complicates matters further when quotations from the novel are folded in without context and sentences carry more weight than many young readers will be ready for: "The red soil of Monroeville, Alabama, is as rocky as the state's past" and "Nelle shunned the ‘pink penitentiary' of girlhood." Still, this is clearly a labor of love, and teachers of To Kill a Mockingbird might read it aloud for the glimpses it offers into the origins of the novel.A well-intentioned effort that might not connect with its intended audience. (author's note) (Picture book/biography. 6-10)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Before she was Harper Lee, she was Nelle, a child growing up during the Great Depression in Monroeville, Ala. In one early scene, Hegedus recounts how Nelle, aware of injustice at a young age, defended a boy on the playground: -Dressed in white linen suits, with a high-pitched voice, Tru was an easy target for bullies.- The friends parted ways as children but reunited as adults in New York City (Tru is, of course, Truman Capote). McGuire-s cinematic cartoons call to mind scenes from the
K-Gr 2 Nelle Harper Lee discovered the power of words at a very young age: "Words had weight. Words held meaning." Growing up in her small Alabama town, Lee subverted traditional gender expectations and enjoyed reading, writing and watching her attorney father work. When a boy named Truman Capote, who grew up to become a famous author in his own right, temporarily moved into the house next door, the two became fast friends and spent time in her tree house creating stories on a typewriter her father gave them. Hegedus's picture book biography tells how Lee wrote a still much beloved novel by basing her main character, Atticus Finch, on her father and using people from her childhood as a source for other characters. Digital illustrations, created using Adobe Photoshop, admirably show Lee's experiences in Alabama and in New York City. A variety of visual perspectives and faces that portray emotions add much to this informational book of a prominent U.S. author. VERDICT Consider for picture book biography collections, especially where there is interest in To Kill a Mockingbird . Maryann H. Owen, Oak Creek Public Library, WI
ALA Booklist
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
The inspiring true story of Harper Lee, the girl who grew up to write To Kill a Mockingbird, from Bethany Hegedus and Erin McGuire. Perfect for fans of The Right Word and I Dissent. This nonfiction picture book is an excellent choice to share during homeschooling, in particular for children ages 4 to 6. It’s a fun way to learn to read and as a supplement for activity books for children.
Nelle Harper Lee grew up in the rocky red soil of Monroeville, Alabama. From the get-go she was a spitfire.
Unlike most girls at that time and place, Nelle preferred overalls to dresses and climbing trees to tea parties. Nelle loved to watch her daddy try cases in the courtroom. And she and her best friend, Tru, devoured books and wrote stories of their own. More than anything Nelle loved words.
This love eventually took her all the way to New York City, where she dreamed of becoming a writer. Any chance she had, Nelle sat at her typewriter, writing, revising, and chasing her dream. Nelle wouldn’t give up—not until she discovered the right story, the one she was born to tell.
Finally, that story came to her, and Nelle, inspired by her childhood, penned To Kill a Mockingbird. A groundbreaking book about small-town injustice that has sold over forty million copies, Nelle’s novel resonated with readers the world over, who, through reading, learned what it was like to climb into someone else’s skin and walk around in it.