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[CCBC-Net] Harper Lee/Kerry Madden
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From: Nancy Bo Flood <wflood>
Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 21:30:26 -0700
What a beautiful tribute to Kerry Madden's work as well as her description of her journey to write the biography she wanted to write. That same kind of courage Kerry quoted from Harper Lee. Thank you, Nancy Bo Flood
970 456-7746 PO 789 Chinle, AZ 86503 (USA)
wflood at hotmail.com www.nancyboflood.com
author of Navajo Year, Walk Through Many Seasons, A Children's Choice and Arizona Book of the Year
Sand to Stone, the Life Cycle of Sandstone
> From: schneiderd at ensworth.com
> To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
> Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 22:18:35 -0500
> Subject: [CCBC-Net] Harper Lee/Kerry Madden
>
> What I especially appreciate about Kerry Madden's biography, beyond the solid research, is the engaging tone of the book. I really felt I was coming to know Harper Lee--a remarkable achievement on Madden's part, given that she never got to interview her, her sense of Harper Lee created from in-depth interviews, research, and visits to the Monroeville to get a real sense of the place. Being an English teacher, I enjoyed the portrait of Gladys Watson Burkett, Lee's high school English teacher, who exhorted her students to write with "clarity, coherence, and cadence." It inspires me to be as tough with my students! I like that this biography includes two of Harper Lee's college writings and, my favorite quote in the book, an excerpt from Lee's letter to O magazine in 2006: "In the letter, she wrote of the comfort of curling up in bed with a book as a child. 'Now, 75 years later in an abundant society where people have laptops, cell phones, iPods, and minds like empty rooms, I st
> ill plod along with books.'" [182]
>
> And, of course, for anyone who teaches To Kill a Mockingbird, as I do with my 8th graders, this biography gives lots of information on the inspiration for events, characters and scenes, and some insights into the movie. Madden does a masterful job of showing how details of Lee's life connect to the novel. It's also a biography that's a fine book in its own right, not just an adjunct to To Kill a Mockingbird. It's the story of a person with the courage and stubbornness to go her own way, to become what she wanted to be.
>
> Next year, I'll be teaching the novel AND reading the biography with my classes.
>
> Dean Schneider
> Ensworth School
> Nashville, Tennessee
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> CCBC-Net mailing list
> CCBC-Net at lists.education.wisc.edu
> Visit this link to read archives or to unsubscribe...
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_________________________________________________________________ Windows Live?: Keep your life in sync. http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_BR_life_in_synch_052009
Received on Tue 19 May 2009 11:30:26 PM CDT
Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 21:30:26 -0700
What a beautiful tribute to Kerry Madden's work as well as her description of her journey to write the biography she wanted to write. That same kind of courage Kerry quoted from Harper Lee. Thank you, Nancy Bo Flood
970 456-7746 PO 789 Chinle, AZ 86503 (USA)
wflood at hotmail.com www.nancyboflood.com
author of Navajo Year, Walk Through Many Seasons, A Children's Choice and Arizona Book of the Year
Sand to Stone, the Life Cycle of Sandstone
> From: schneiderd at ensworth.com
> To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
> Date: Tue, 19 May 2009 22:18:35 -0500
> Subject: [CCBC-Net] Harper Lee/Kerry Madden
>
> What I especially appreciate about Kerry Madden's biography, beyond the solid research, is the engaging tone of the book. I really felt I was coming to know Harper Lee--a remarkable achievement on Madden's part, given that she never got to interview her, her sense of Harper Lee created from in-depth interviews, research, and visits to the Monroeville to get a real sense of the place. Being an English teacher, I enjoyed the portrait of Gladys Watson Burkett, Lee's high school English teacher, who exhorted her students to write with "clarity, coherence, and cadence." It inspires me to be as tough with my students! I like that this biography includes two of Harper Lee's college writings and, my favorite quote in the book, an excerpt from Lee's letter to O magazine in 2006: "In the letter, she wrote of the comfort of curling up in bed with a book as a child. 'Now, 75 years later in an abundant society where people have laptops, cell phones, iPods, and minds like empty rooms, I st
> ill plod along with books.'" [182]
>
> And, of course, for anyone who teaches To Kill a Mockingbird, as I do with my 8th graders, this biography gives lots of information on the inspiration for events, characters and scenes, and some insights into the movie. Madden does a masterful job of showing how details of Lee's life connect to the novel. It's also a biography that's a fine book in its own right, not just an adjunct to To Kill a Mockingbird. It's the story of a person with the courage and stubbornness to go her own way, to become what she wanted to be.
>
> Next year, I'll be teaching the novel AND reading the biography with my classes.
>
> Dean Schneider
> Ensworth School
> Nashville, Tennessee
> _______________________________________________
> CCBC-Net mailing list
> CCBC-Net at lists.education.wisc.edu
> Visit this link to read archives or to unsubscribe...
> http://lists.education.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/ccbc-net
_________________________________________________________________ Windows Live?: Keep your life in sync. http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_BR_life_in_synch_052009
Received on Tue 19 May 2009 11:30:26 PM CDT