National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateDon Dailey: Capitol Journal UpdateJohn Archibald: Some things go fast, some things go slow WBHM Seeks News Director Kyle Whitmire: Delay for Alabama Accountability Act? Cindy Crawford: Magic City Marketplace Capitol Journal Update Tanya Ott's final day at WBHM John Archibald Kyle Whitmire: How was the Collapsed Airport Display Designed? John Archibald: Unrest at the Jefferson County Commission Kyle Whitmire: Jefferson County Top Attorney Job Reopens Healing the Hurt in Hurtsboro Black School, White School: Teaching The Civil Rights Movement The Postman's March I Was Told I Couldn't Be a Feminist Because I'm Black Hostess to the Civil Rights Movement 1963 Church Bombing Seeks Compensation John Archibald: Why Jeffco Is Paying Attorney $393K To Do Nothing Common Core, Part 3: More Writing May Be A Challenge Common Core, Part 2: Implementation a Challenge Commissioners Question Decision on County Attorney Jeff Sewell Diane McWhorter on Civil Rights 50th Anniversary Common Core, Part 1: Is The Hype Really Just Hype? Remembering Roger Ebert News Features Archive |
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Charles J. Shields has written a biography of Lee: "Mockingbird; A Portrait of Harper Lee" is out now. In it Shields deals with her childhood in Monroeville (touching on her strained relationship with her mother and her friendship with Truman Capote), her struggle to write "To Kill a Mockingbird" and her retreat from public life. WBHM's Rosemary Pennington spoke with Shields about the book and some of the obstacles thrown in his way as he attempted to write it. |








| Birmingham -- She grew up in a small town in Alabama during the Depression, spending her time taking on bullies, writing stories with her best friend and idolizing her father. She'd attempt to take the path her father wanted, enrolling in law school, but she'd leave it all behind to move to New York City to try to make it as a writer. And did Nelle Harper Lee ever make it as a writer. Her first, and only, novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" is considered one of the seminal works of the 20th Centuty.
It catapulted Lee into fame -- a fame she didn't really want. She retreated from the limelight, giving her last interview in 1965.