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The book "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee published in 1960 is considered as one of the best books to read. Full Article at Associated Content
Destined to be a classic, Sweeping Up Glass is a tough and tender novel of love, race, and justice, and a ferocious, unflinching look at the power of family. Full Article at Powell's Books
This is a perfect little book, like a head-on collision between Flannery O'Connor and Harper Lee, with a bit of Faulkner on a mystery binge. I loved every page of it.
Perhaps it is a question which does not immediately present itself while perusing a beautiful painting by DaVinci or Picasso, listening to music by Mozart, Beethoveen, or The Beatles, reading Shakespeare, Poe, or Harper Lee, and watching films by... Full Article at Associated Content
Truman Capote in the living room of the Clutter ranch Photograph: AP River Valley farm stands at the end of an earth road leading out of Holcomb, a small town on the western edge of Kansas. Full Article at Guardian Unlimited
Cowan, who is in the Australian squad touring the UK, gave up the possibility of a spot in last night's Test against England at Twickenham to make the run. Full Article at PerthNow
Carolyn D. Wall has created an engaging character in Olivia Harker and a complex and densely interconnected community in Aurora, Kentucky. Her evocative prose recalls the regional style of such authors as Flannery O'Connor, Harper Lee, and Eudora Welty.
FROSTBURG — Racial tensions of the 1930s Deep South are the focus with Frostburg State University’s Cultural Events Series presentation of the play based on Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Harper Lee, “To Kill a Mockingbird,” on Nov. 17, at 7:30 p.m. Full Article at The Cumberland Times-News
Few of us are immune to the sensation that is Stephenie Meyer. She dominates the bestseller lists, reduces teenage girls to catatonic wrecks, and has the entire literary world talking. Full Article at PopMatters
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This is a perfect little book, like a head-on collision between Flannery O'Connor and Harper Lee, with a bit of Faulkner on a mystery binge. I loved every page of it.
Carolyn D. Wall has created an engaging character in Olivia Harker and a complex and densely interconnected community in Aurora, Kentucky. Her evocative prose recalls the regional style of such authors as Flannery O'Connor, Harper Lee, and Eudora Welty.
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