Nelle Harper Lee, a prominent author of the world's best selling To Kill a Mockingbird, was born on 28th April 1926 at Amasa Coleman (attorney) and Frances Lee. At that time, the family lived in Monroeville, Alabama. Harper's family is a little rich and they spend most of their time in the middle class society. Harper's birth date is Nalle. Her grandmother is spelled backwards (Allen). However, in her publication, she adopted her middle name Harper to avoid being called "Nelly". But many people have never heard of it - many people will be surprised - it was wind and rainy night, Harper toss all her unpublished manuscripts from the window and push the Mockingbirds Killed.
In real life, Truman Capote shared many talents and hobbies with Harper Lee. "In the early 1930's, Nelle Harper Lee and Truman Capote became Big Leads in Monroeville, Alabama." They like to write, so Amasa has two older underwood typewriters (The Big Read ). In classics, Truman's name is Charles Baker. They often call him Dear. "Capote was a 3 rd grade and moved to New York, joining her mother and step step-father, he returned to Monroeville for the majority of the summer and eventually became Killing a Robin's dill.Inspiration (The Big Read).
Nelle Harper Lee and Truman Capote became kindergarten members of Monroeville, Alabama in the early 1930s. They live next door to each other. Captured by my aunt and my uncle, three brothers and sisters with her parents. As Capote later mentioned, they like to read and recognize each other as "separate" from the beginning. When Lee's father handed them old old underwood typewriters, they started writing their original stories. Kapoto moved to New York to join her mother and stepfather, but the bulk of the summer returned to Monroeville and encouraged Dill to kill Robin.
Marock Mills, neighboring Mockingbird: Living with Lee, friends, Lee's neighbors, and her sister Alice draw a completely different picture. In her work for the Washington Post, "I know Harper Lee," she quotes Alice, a sister of Lee. The poor Nelle Harper was confident that he could not see or hear anyone writing something in front of her. That is through her new attorney. She explained Lee as "a supplementary wheelchair's life center, almost awkward, wearing security guards that are united at the door," her visitor said, "only in the list of approved people "