Lee Smiths' novel "Agate Hill Mariah Snow" wrote that "I lost my name when I lost my youth, beauty, and life" (163). This sentence by Leithmith's novel "Agate Mountain" quotes Mary and her own life. Men maintain the power of most interpersonal relationships, and throughout society, Mary has been pushed a lot for her, but as she feels it is not even daring to say so, come out. When a woman gets married, they nearly symbolize that their personality has completely disappeared and give up their last name.
On September 4, 2002, I participated in the lecture at Agate Nesaule. Agate is the author of the newly born binding novel "Amberwoman". The lecture is about 2 hours. In the lecture, Agate talked about her childhood during the war. This lecture should include a discussion about her book and the way she wrote it, but Agate tells her childhood in more detail. I felt the lecture was very late and boring. Agate raised the topic of many amber women, such as the harsh circumstances during wartime and the influence such situation on family like her. She emphasized the importance of using emotions to reduce language anxiety. In the course of lecture, aged rarely changed her condition, she rarely examined from her memo. As a speaker and as an English teacher (she) she should be ready to talk to the audience.
Nelle Harper Lee was born in Monroeville, Alabama on April 28, 1926. Lee is inspired from his childhood. Like Boy Scouts, Lee's father is also a lawyer. This novel is not autobiography, but this novel has some similarities with Li's life. The novel is scheduled for the 1930's, but the novel does not touch the problems related to Lee's time. According to the interview, Lee spent about 2 years writing to kill the Bluegrass Special. Prior to the publication of the novel, the civil rights movement was ongoing. In the past ten years, the civil rights movement was successful and I saw "the first major victory of the Supreme Court's civil rights" (Vox). In addition, as the novel was scheduled in the 1930s, the Great Depression punished many families as seen in Cunninghams and Ewells.