The land of sweet forever Stories and essays

Harper Lee

Large print - 2025

"... A posthumous collection of newly discovered short stories and previously published essays and magazine pieces, offering a fresh perspective on the remarkable literary mind of Harper Lee."--Provided by publisher.

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LARGE PRINT/FICTION/Lee, Harper
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Subjects
Genres
Large type books
short stories
large type books
Short stories
Essays
Nouvelles
Livres en gros caractères
Published
[New York, N.Y.] : Harper Large Print, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Harper Lee (author)
Other Authors
Casey N. Cep (editor)
Edition
First Harper Large Print edition, Large Print edition
Physical Description
xxix, 192 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780063468733
  • Stories. The water tank
  • The binoculars
  • The pinking shears
  • A roomful of kibble
  • The viewers and the viewed
  • This is show business?
  • The cat's meow
  • The land of sweet forever
  • Essays and miscellaneous pieces. Love
  • in other words
  • Crackling bread
  • Christmas to me
  • Gregory Peck
  • When children discover America
  • Truman Capote
  • Romance and high adventure
  • A letter from Harper Lee.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Miscellaneous writings from shortly before and afterTo Kill a Mockingbird made the author famous. Taken as a whole, the works add up to pleasant ephemera. The eight previously unpublished short stories mostly plumb the same material as Lee's bestselling novel: small-town life in Alabama, often viewed through the eyes of a child. In "The Water Tank," a sixth grader is terrified that she might be pregnant based on misleading information from her much older, half-educated classmates. "The Binoculars," "The Cat's Meow," and the title story also address with rueful humor Southern ignorance and narrow-mindedness, though the calm, reasonable father in "The Pinking Shears" foreshadows the counterbalance presented by Atticus Finch inMockingbird. "This Is Show Business?," a funny account of a favor turned into a day-long ordeal, and "A Roomful of Kibble," about an eccentric acquaintance, are the only tales set in New York, where Lee lived for many years; "The Viewers and the Viewed," a wry analysis of Manhattan movie audiences' reactions to bogus film titles, is misleadingly grouped under fiction. The essays published in the decade following her novel's success are standard-issue magazine fare: a rambling consideration of "Love--in Other Words"; a recipe for crackling bread with the sardonic aside, "Some historians say by this recipe alone fell the Confederacy"; patriotic musings on "When Children Discover America." The exceptions are a moving piece about the Christmas gift that gave Lee the freedom to write without financial constraints for an entire year and a touching but sharp-eyed tribute to her close friend Truman Capote. A 1983 lecture nostalgically recalls Albert James Pickett's 19th-centuryHistory of Alabama; a 1989 essay written for an American Film Institute program praises Gregory Peck's "inspired performance" as Atticus; and a 2006 letter to Oprah asks, "Can you imagine curling up in bed to read a computer?" Agreeable enough, but best for completist library collections and diehard fans. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.