I Am Scout (30 page)

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Authors: Charles J. Shields

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“John Megna, 42, ‘Mockingbird' Star” (obit).
New York Times,
7 September 1995, B17.

Johnson, Claudia Durst. “The Secret Courts of Men's Hearts: Code and Law in Harper Lee's
To Kill a Mockingbird.

Studies in American Fiction
19 (Autumn 1991): 129–39.

Jones, George Thomas. “Courthouse Lawn Was Once Kids' Playground.” In
Happenings in Old Monroeville.
Vol. 2. Monroeville, Ala.: Bolton Newspapers, 2003.

———. “Stand Up, Monroeville, Gregory Peck Is Passin'.”
Happenings in Old Monroeville.
Vol. 2. Monroeville, Ala.: Bolton Newspapers, 2003, 159–60.

———. “Young Harper Lee's Affinity for Fighting.” EducETH.ch (The English Page), 7 December 1999, <
www.educeth.ch/english/readinglist/leeh/remin.html#fight
>.

Jubera, Drew. “‘Mockingbird' Still Sings Despite Silence of Author Harper Lee.”
Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
26 August 1990, M1 and M3.

———. “To Find a Mockingbird.”
Dallas Times Herald,
1984.

Keith, Don Lee. “An Afternoon with Harper Lee.”
Delta Review
(Spring 1966): 40–41, 75, 81–82.

Kemp, Kathy. “Mockingbird Won't Sing.”
News & Observer,
12 November 1997, E1.

Krebs, Albin. “Truman Capote Is Dead at 59; Novelist of Style and Clarity.”
New York Times,
28 August 1984.

Lawrence, Wes. “Author's Problem: Friends.”
Cleveland Plain Dealer,
17 March 1964.

Lee, Gus.
Honor and Duty.
Reprint. New York: Ivy Books, 1994.

Lee, Harper. “Alabama Authors Write of Slaves, Women, GIs.”
Crimson White,
1 October 1946, 2.

———. “Caustic Comment.”
Crimson White,
28 June 1946, 2.

———. “Christmas to Me.”
McCall's,
December 1961, 63.

———. Foreword to the 35th anniversary edition of
To Kill a Mockingbird.
New York: HarperCollins, 1993.

———. “Nightmare.”
The Prelude
(Huntingdon College literary magazine), 11.

———. “Now Is the Time for All Good Men” (one-act play).
Rammer Jammer,
October 1946, 7, 17–18.

———. “Some Writers of Our Times.”
Rammer Jammer,
November 1945, 14.

———. “Springtime.”
Monroe Journal,
1 April 1937, 3.

———. “A Wink at Justice.”
The Prelude
(Huntingdon College literary magazine), 14–15.

Lee, Wayne. “Emotions Mixed Among Clutter Participants.”
Hutchinson News,
31 October 1965.

“Lett Negro Saved from Electric Chair.”
Monroe Journal,
12 July 1934, 1.

Letter to the editor. “Caustic Comment.”
Crimson White,
2 August 1946, 2.

Letter to the editor. “Spreading Poison.”
Atlanta Journal,
7 February 1961.

“‘Little Nelle' Heads Ram, Maps Lee's Strategy.”
Crimson White,
8 October 1946, 1.

Lubet, Steven. “Reconstructing Atticus Finch.”
Michigan Law Review
97 no. 6 (1999): 1339–62.

“‘Luckiest Person in the World,' Says Pulitzer Winner.”
Birmingham News,
2 May 1961.

McCoy, Kathy. “
To Kill a Mockingbird:
The Great American Novel.”
Legacy
(Monroe County Heritage Museums), 1994, 22–25.

McDonald, Thomas. “Bird in Hand.”
New York Times,
6 May 1962, 149.

McGee, Scott, Kerryn Sherrod, and Jeff Stafford.
To Kill a Mockingbird: The Essentials.
Turner Classic Movies,
www.turnerclassicmovies.com

McLendon, Winzola. “Nobody Mocks ‘Mockingbird' Author: Sales Are Proof of Pudding.”
Washington Post,
17 November 1960, B12.

Mills, Marja. “A Life Apart: Harper Lee, The Complex Woman Behind ‘A Delicious Mystery.'”
Chicago Tribune,
13 September 2002.

“Miss Nelle Lee Chosen to Attend Oxford.”
Monroe Journal,
29 April 1948, 1.

Mitgang, Herbert. “Books of the Times” (column).
New York Times,
13 July 1960, 33.

“Mocking Bird Call.”
Newsweek,
9 January 1961.

“Mockingbird Film May Begin in Fall.”
Birmingham News,
2 May 1961.

“Negro Held for Attacking a Woman.”
Monroe Journal,
9 November 1933, 1.

“Nelle Harper Lee.” In Charles Moritz, ed.
Current Biography.
New York: H. W. Wilson Co., 1961.

Nicholson, Colin. “Hollywood and Race:
To Kill a Mockingbird.
” In John Orr and Colin Nicholson, eds.
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“One Version of the Harper Lee Story.”
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Otts, Elizabeth. “Lady Lawyers Prepare Homecoming Costumes.”
Crimson White,
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Park, Mary Jane. “Truman's Aunt Tiny.”
St. Petersburg Times,
3 October 2000,
www.sptimes.com/News/100300/Floridian/Truman_s_Aunt_Tiny.shtml
.

Pennypacker, Nathaniel. “Massacre of the Clutter Family.”
Front Page Detective,
April 1960.

Plimpton, George. “The Story Behind a Nonfiction Novel.”
New York Times,
16 January 1966, <
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.

“Prize Winner Remembered as Deflater of Phoniness.”
Montgomery Advertiser,
4 May 1961.

Rhodes, Matthew W. “Truman Capote.”
Legacy
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Romine, Dannye. “Truman's Aunt: A Bio in Cold Blood.”
Chicago Tribune,
5 June 1983, sec. 5, 1–2.

Rowley, Hazel. “Mockingbird Country.”
The Australian's Review of Books,
April 1999.

“Scene of the Crime: Twenty-Five Years Later, Holcomb, Kansas Remembers ‘In Cold Blood.'”
Chicago Sunday Tribune,
11 November 1984.

Schumach, Murray. “Film Crew Saves $75,000 on Shacks.”
New York Times,
19 January 1962, 26.

———. “Prize for Novel Elates Film Pair.”
New York Times,
19 May 1961.

Shackelford, Dean. “The Female Voice in
To Kill a Mockingbird:
Narrative Strategies in Film and the Novel.” In Harold Bloom, ed.,
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Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 1999, 121.

“State Pulitzer Prize Winner Too Busy to Write.”
Dothan Eagle,
2 May 1961.

Steinem, Gloria. “‘Go Right Ahead and Ask Me Anything' (And So She Did): An Interview with Truman Capote.”
McCall's,
November 1967, 76–77, 148–52, 154.

Steiner, George. “A Cold-Blooded Happening.”
Guardian,
2 December 1965.

“Story of Attempted Drowning Called False, Angers Harper Lee.”
Tuscaloosa News,
25 September 1997.

“Tay Hohoff, Author, Lippincott Officer” (obit).
New York Times,
12 January 1974, 36.

“They All Had a Ball at Capote's Party.”
Washington Post,
30 November 1966, D2.

“Traffic Ticket Report.”
Saturday Review,
6 August 1960.

Vancheri, Barbara. “Author Lauded ‘Mockingbird' as a ‘Moving' Film.”
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
20 February 2003.

“Wealthy Farmer, 3 of Family Slain.”
New York Times,
16 November 1959, 7.

Weiler, A. H. “New Midtown Showcase—Other Film Matters.” (“Bird” Team.) “By Way of Report” (column).
New York Times,
29 January 1961, X7.

Weiss, M. Jerry. “To Kill a Mockingbird.”
Photoplay Guide.
NCTE Studies in the Mass Media. Champaign, Ill.: The National Council of Teachers of English, March 1963, 18.

Whitley, Carla Jean. “Small-Town Q&A: Amanda McMillan.”
Crimson White,
University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, 9 October 2003.

Wiebe, Crystal K. “Author Left Mark on State.” LJ [
Lawrence Journal
]
World.com
, 3 April 2005.

———. “‘To Kill a Mockingbird' Author Helped Truman Capote Break the Ice in Kansas.” LJ [
Lawrence
Journal
]
World.com
, 3 April 2005.

Wolcott, James. “Tru Grit.”
Vanity Fair,
October 2005.

Woodard, Calvin. “Listening to the Mockingbird.”
Alabama Law Review
45 (Winter 1994): 563–85.

Yoder, J. Wes. “Debating the Details: Some Residents of Monroeville Prefer to Ponder the Fine Points of Famous Novel.”
Expressions
(online magazine). Auburn University Journalism Department, 2001.

York, Max. “Throngs Greet Monroe Writer.”
Montgomery Advertiser,
13 September 1960.

Young, Amelia. “Her Writing Place Is Secret: ‘Mockingbird' Author Working on Second Book.”
Minneapolis Star
(?), 26 May 1963.

Young, Thomas Daniel. Introduction to Part III in
A History of Southern Literature.
Louis D. Rubin, Jr., et al, eds. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1985, 262.

Zoerink, Richard. “Truman Capote Talks About His Crowd.”
Playgirl,
September 1975, 50–51, 54, 80–81, 128.

Media

Dewey, Alvin A., as told to Dolores Hope. “The Clutter Case: 25 Years Later KBI Agent Recounts Holcomb Tragedy.”
Garden City Telegram,
10 November 1984, compact disc.

Noble, Don. “Bookmark: Interview with Horton Foote.” Videocassette. Alabama Center for Public Television. Tuscaloosa, Ala., 27 August 1998.

To Kill a Mockingbird.
CD. Commentary section. Universal City, Calif.: Universal Home Video, 1998.

“‘To Kill a Mockingbird': Then and Now.” Videocassette. Prince William County Public Schools. Manassas, Va., 25 April 1997.

Index

The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

Academy Awards

Adams, Phoebe

Alabama Girls' Industrial School

Alabama State constitution

Alabama–West Florida Conference of the Methodist Church

Alexander City Outlook

Alford, Phillip

Anderson, James

Arlen, Harold

Atherton, Mary Nell

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlantic

Atticus
.
See also
To Kill a Mockingbird

Austen, Jane

Badham, Mary

Baggett, Robert

Barnett, Bugg & Lee (formerly Barnett, Bugg & Jones)

Bass, Jonathan S.

BBC

Beaton, Cecil

Behan, Brendan

Biggs, Wanda

Birmingham, Ala.,
To Kill a Mockingbird
premiere in

Black and White Ball

Blass, A. B., Jr.

Blass, Joseph

Boleware house and family, Monroeville, Ala.

Book-of-the-Month Club

Brentwood Productions

British Book Society

British Overseas Air Corporation (BOAC)

Brown, Joy

Brown, Martha

Brown, Michael Martin

Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka

Bumstead, Henry

Burns, Robert

Butts, Rev. Thomas

Calpurnia's Cookbook

Capitol News and Book Company

Capote: A Biography
(Clarke)

Capote, Joseph (Truman's stepfather)

Capote, Truman (born Truman Streckfus Persons)

Black and White Ball of

childhood of

Clutter murders and.
See also
Clutter murders;
In Cold Blood

death of

Dill character and

drugs and alcohol abused by

earliest writing efforts of

explanations for Nelle's bond with

first known short story by

indiscretions of

mental abilities of

moved away from Monroeville

Nelle's adult friendship with

Other Voices, Other Rooms
by

parents' lack of interest in

photographs of

physical appearance of

prone to telling lies

reading loved by

rumored participation of, in writing of
To Kill a Mockingbird

schooling of

tantrums and rages of

on
To Kill a Mockingbird

unlikeliness of Nelle's childhood friendship with

Capp, Jack

Carter, Jennings Faulk (Truman's cousin)

Carter, Mary Ida (Truman's aunt)

“Caustic Comment” column (Lee)

Cerf, Bennett

Chappell, Gordon T.

Chasin, George

Chicago Tribune

Chi Delta Phi

Chi Omega

Christmas Memory, A
(Capote)

civil rights movement

Civil War

Clare, Myrtle T.

Clarke, Gerald

Clausell, Hattie

Clutter farm (Holcomb, Kans.)

auction of

Truman and Nelle's inspection of

Clutter murders.
See also
In Cold Blood

capture of suspects in

executions for

KBI interrogations and

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