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Harper Lee to publish "Mockingbird" sequel

Turtletrekker

Admiral
Admiral
The reclusive Harper Lee, author of the masterpiece "To Kill a Mockingbird" and literally nothing else, will finally be releasing the sequel "Go Set a Watchman", featuring an adult Scout and an aged Atticus in the 1950s. Apparently, the book was actually written before "Mockingbird".

I read "Mockingbird" back in the 80's and I still remember it vividly. Looking forward to this.
 
To Kill a Mockingbird is one of my favorite novels, so I was thrilled when I heard this on NPR yesterday. However, I was more than a little disappointed to see this article this morning. It seems that for years Lee's wishes were fiercely protected by her sister who was also a lawyer. Her sister died recently and suddenly this novel is going to be published, making one wonder if something shady is going on.
 
^Yeah, I have very mixed feelings about this. I fear that the woman has been woefully taken advantage of.
 
Yeah, I read about her sister and such after I posted the thread. I can only hope that Ms. Lee is receiving a truckload of money for this which will make her final years very comfortable ones.
 
The interview with her editor is also maddeningly, somewhat suspiciously vague:

At the very least, they would have talked to Harper Lee about it, right? To get her, you know, permission?

Who knows! Yesterday Vulture ran one of the most confusing interviews I’ve ever seen from Harper Lee’s editor, Hugh Van Dusen, who doesn’t seem to know what room he’s in at the moment:

Why is this book finally showing up now, after all these years?
"The version I was told was that the book was in either a safe deposit box or a bank vault, and it was wrapped in a manuscript of To Kill a Mockingbird and nobody noticed it for all these years. I don’t know this for a fact, but one must imagine that Harper Lee — we call her Nelle — just never told anybody about the book and then forgot it existed. Her lawyer, Tonja Carter, who is also Nelle’s very close friend, was apparently looking through this safety deposit box and found [Go Set a Watchman]. I guess she then went to her friend said what it is this? Nelle said, and this is all public knowledge, that her editor at the time at Lippincott, the original publisher of To Kill a Mockingbird, said to her this isn’t what you want to write; you want to write something about Scout when she was a girl. So Nelle went back and wrote a new book: To Kill a Mockingbird."

HOO BOY, it is never a great sign when the answer to a direct, simple question is “THE VERSION I WAS TOLD.” Because, right, “I’ve seen a 40 million figure”…your editor doesn’t just bung away your only other book into a safety deposit back for fifty years when your only novel is that huge of a bestseller? And then right after Harper’s sister/lawyer/advocate dies, this book just happens to turn up, and you just happen to set a release date? This feels like the publishing equivalent of “these jeans just fell off a truck, forty dollars, cash.”

Harper is a famously private person. Does she have any ambivalence about the fact that the publication of the book is going to result in a lot of new publicity?
"I don’t think so. In our press release she says, “After much thought and hesitation I shared [Go Set a Watchman] with a handful of people I trust and was pleased to hear they considered it worthy of publication. I am humbled and amazed that this will now be published after all these years.” "

Wait, she says it or your press release says it for her? You don’t think she has any ambivalence? You’re literally unsure about the degree of her ambivalence?

Has the book been edited? Or is what will eventually be on bookshelves untouched from what was in the safety deposit box?
"If it has been edited, nobody’s told me. It’s the novel she wrote and showed to her editor at Lippincott, who didn’t think it was the book Nelle should be writing. So Nelle wrote another book. I don’t know this for a fact, but I doubt very much that anyone at Harper has edited it. My understanding is that it will be exactly what she wrote in the mid-1950s."

“Nobody’s told me.” “My understanding is.” You guys should have a meeting about this, probably! I don’t know, MAYBE it’s not the case that a bunch of publishers eager to capitalize on a hugely profitable name are taking advantage of a very elderly woman who lives in a nursing home and has diminished capacity. I hope that this is not the case! But if you are going to release another book of hers, maybe make sure that you are going through all of the appropriate steps! Coordinate your message among your team members! Decide if you are going to edit the book or not, and then tell the editor, because that seems like information the editor should have. Right?

The link to the full interview is here.
 
Honestly, that article feels a lot like someone trying to create a controversy where none exists.

First, I believe it when Lee's current lawyer is called "a good friend". I can't imagine that Lee's sister didn't prepare for the possibility of her dying before her sister. As a lawyer herself, she would know a lot of other lawyers and probably picked out her new lawyer because she was a good friend.

Second, the article makes a big deal over the editor not having had a meeting with Lee. This doesn't surprise me either, as Lee is very reclusive. Given that and her age, it really shouldn't surprise anyone. She lets her lawyer handle all of that. That's what she's paid for.

Third, we have an actual statement from the lady herself. I guess I'm just not cynical enough to believe that her statement was ghost written by a lawyer or a publisher against her will or without her knowledge. It seemed like a sincere and heartfelt sentiment to me.
 
The best explanation for a lot of what sounds peculiar and off-putting in that interview was that the guy had just been informed he was the book's editor and had no real idea what was going on, which is why he sounds incredibly tentative about even just basic straightforward questions (stuff like "the version I was told" instead of just saying "this is what happened," or "in our press release she says" instead of just "she says").

That needn't signify anything sinister, but it's quite weird in itself in a way that's noticeable if you're familiar with how the big publishing houses tend to market and communicate, which I suspect is the most basic reason it stood out to Ortberg; having the process on a book this potentially prominent moving so fast that the book's editor is giving clued-out interviews in which he's clearly lacking basic information is not normal practise at all, to put it mildly. But it may just mean that the staffer who was meant to communicate with him screwed up and is currently being fired.
 
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