Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Alabama

NOLADawn said, "Ok, some more Southern Lit here... AL- To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee."

As Winner of the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for Literature, Fiction, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is definitely a good book for our list. Thanks.

At the age of eight, Scout Finch is an entrenched free-thinker. She can accept her father's warning that it is a sin to kill a mockingbird, because mockingbirds harm no one and give great pleasure. The benefits said to be gained from going to school and keeping her temper elude her.

The place of this enchanting, intensely moving story is Maycomb, Alabama. The time is the Depression, but Scout and her brother, Jem, are seldom depressed. They have appalling gifts for entertaining themselves — appalling, that is, to almost everyone except their wise lawyer father, Atticus.

Atticus is a man of unfaltering good will and humor, and partly because of this, the children become involved in some disturbing adult mysteries: fascinating Boo Radley, who never leaves his house; the terrible temper of Mrs. Dubose down the street; the fine distinctions that make the Finch family "quality"; the forces that cause the people of Maycomb to show compassion in one crisis and unreasoning cruelty in another.

Also because Atticus is what he is, and because he lives where he does, he and his children are plunged into a conflict that indelibly marks their lives — and gives Scout some basis for thinking she knows just about as much about the world as she needs to.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Alabama

For Alabama, Bonnie suggests the fun-filled Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistlestop Cafe by Fannie Flagg. The little town is located just outside Birmingham, Alabama.

Cleo Threadgood and Evelyn Couch meet in the 1980s in the visitors lounge of an Alabama nursing home and find themselves exchanging confidences that are sometimes only safe to reveal to strangers. Evelyn is middle-aged and falling apart, while Cleo, at age 86, cherishes memories of a lifetime spent in Whistle Stop, the tiny town which flourished in the days of the Great Depression. Most of the town's life centered around its single cafe, whose owners, gentle Ruth and tomboyish Idgie, served up grits and fried green tomatoes to anyone who passed by. Their love for each other (and just about everyone else) survived the Depression, visits from the sheriff, the Ku Klux Klan, a host of hungry hoboes, and a murder.