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1-4 of 4 online sources for A. Lee

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    www.altoonalibrary.org/onebook/biog.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/6/2007    Last Visited: 12/14/2007  

    Her father, Amasa Cole Lee, practiced law.Before A. C. Lee became a title lawyer, he once defended two black men accused of murdering a white storekeeper.Both clients, a father and son, were hanged.

    As a child, Harper Lee was an unruly tomboy.She fought on the playground.She talked back to teachers.She was bored with school and resisted any sort of conformity.The character of Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird would have liked her.In high school Lee was fortunate to have a gifted English teacher, Gladys Watson Burkett, who introduced her to challenging literature and the rigors of writing well.
    ...
    Lee loved 19th-century British authors best, and once said that her ambition was to become "the Jane Austen of south Alabama."

    Unable to fit in with the sorority she joined at the University of Alabama, she found a second home on the campus newspaper.Eventually she became editor-in-chief of the Rammer Jammer, a quarterly humor magazine on campus.She entered the law school, but she "loathed" it.Despite her father's hopes that she would become a local attorney like her sister Alice, Lee went to New York to pursue her writing.

    She spent eight years working odd jobs before she finally showed a manuscript to Tay Hohoff, an editor at J.B. Lippincott.At this point, it still resembled a string of stories more than the novel that Lee had intended.Under Hohoff's guidance, two and a half years of rewriting followed.When the novel was finally ready for publication, the author opted for the name "Harper Lee" on the cover, because she didn't want to be misidentified as "Nellie."

    To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960 to highly favorable reviews and quickly climbed the bestseller lists, where it remained for 88 weeks.In 1961, the novel won the Pulitzer Prize.

    Though fans of the book waited for a second novel, it never came.Lee later researched a book, similar to Capote's In Cold Blood, about a part-time minister in Alexander City, Alabama, accused of killing five people for their insurance money and later himself murdered by a victim's relative.
    ...
    According to biographer Charles J. Shields, Lee was unprepared for the amount of personal attention associated with writing a bestseller.Ever since, she has led a quiet and guardedly private life.

  • View Online Source
    www.readacrossmckinney.org/lee_bio.htm - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 1/6/2007    Last Visited: 2/14/2008  

    After "studying for the law," as it was called, A. C. Lee became an attorney with the firm of Bugg, Barnett & Jones.He was a title lawyer, not a criminal lawyer, although he was once appointed to defend two black men accused of murdering a white storekeeper.Both his clients, a father and son, were hanged.

  • View Online Source
    The Big Read - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/28/2007    Last Visited: 9/10/2008  

    Her father, Amasa Cole Lee, practiced law.Before A. C. Lee became a title lawyer, he once defended two black men accused of murdering a white storekeeper.Both clients, a father and son, were hanged.

    As a child, Harper Lee was an unruly tomboy.She fought on the playground.She talked back to teachers.She was bored with school and resisted any sort of conformity.The character of Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird would have liked her.In high school Lee was fortunate to have a gifted English teacher, Gladys Watson Burkett, who introduced her to challenging literature and the rigors of writing well.
    ...
    Lee loved 19th-century British authors best, and once said that her ambition was to become "the Jane Austen of south Alabama."

    Unable to fit in with the sorority she joined at the University of Alabama, she found a second home on the campus newspaper.Eventually she became editor-in-chief of the Rammer Jammer, a quarterly humor magazine on campus.She entered the law school, but she "loathed" it.Despite her father's hopes that she would become a local attorney like her sister Alice, Lee went to New York to pursue her writing.

    She spent eight years working odd jobs before she finally showed a manuscript to Tay Hohoff, an editor at J.B. Lippincott.At this point, it still resembled a string of stories more than the novel that Lee had intended.Under Hohoff's guidance, two and a half years of rewriting followed.When the novel was finally ready for publication, the author opted for the name "Harper Lee" on the cover, because she didn't want to be misidentified as "Nellie."

    To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960 to highly favorable reviews and quickly climbed the bestseller lists, where it remained for 88 weeks.In 1961, the novel won the Pulitzer Prize.

    Though fans of the book waited for a second novel, it never came.Lee later researched a book, similar to Capote's In Cold Blood, about a part-time minister in Alexander City, Alabama, accused of killing five people for their insurance money and later himself murdered by a victim's relative.
    ...
    According to biographer Charles J. Shields, Lee was unprepared for the amount of personal attention associated with writing a bestseller.

  • View Online Source
    The Big Read | To Kill a Mockingbird - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/28/2007    Last Visited: 4/6/2009  

    Before A.C. Lee became a title lawyer, he once defended two black men accused of murdering a white storekeeper. Both clients, a father and son, were hanged.

    As a child, Harper Lee was an unruly tomboy. She fought on the playground. She talked back to teachers. She was bored with school and resisted any sort of conformity. The character of Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird would have liked her. In high school Lee was fortunate to have a gifted English teacher, Gladys Watson Burkett, who introduced her to challenging literature and the rigors of writing well.
    ...
    Lee loved ninteenth-century British authors best, and once said that her ambition was to become "the Jane Austen of south Alabama."

    Unable to fit in with the sorority she joined at the University of Alabama, she found a second home on the campus newspaper. Eventually she became editor-in-chief of the Rammer Jammer, a quarterly humor magazine on campus. She entered the law school, but she "loathed" it. Despite her father's hopes that she would become a local attorney like her sister Alice, Lee went to New York to pursue her writing.

    She spent eight years working odd jobs before she finally showed a manuscript to Tay Hohoff, an editor at J.B. Lippincott. At this point, it still resembled a string of stories more than the novel that Lee had intended. Under Hohoff's guidance, two and a half years of rewriting followed. When the novel was finally ready for publication, the author opted for the name "Harper Lee" on the cover, because she didn't want to be misidentified as "Nellie."

    To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960 to highly favorable reviews and quickly climbed the bestseller lists, where it remained for eighty-eight weeks. In 1961, the novel won the Pulitzer Prize.

    Though fans of the book waited for a second novel, it never came. Lee later researched a book, similar to Capote's In Cold Blood (1966), about a part-time minister in Alexander City, Alabama, accused of killing five people for their insurance money and later himself murdered by a victim's relative.
    ...
    According to biographer Charles J. Shields, Lee was unprepared for the amount of personal attention associated with writing a bestseller.

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