Harper Lee's Only Recorded Interview About 'To Kill A Mockingbird' [AUDIO]

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • In 1964, Harper Lee talked with WQXR host Roy Newquist for an interview in New York. For the first time, that interview is now available to listen to online. The interview is the only known recording of Lee discussing "To Kill a Mockingbird," among other topics, and one of the last interviews she would ever give.
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Комментарии • 171

  • @brandoncaldwell2567
    @brandoncaldwell2567 2 года назад +137

    My great grandmother went to school with Harper and they stayed friends for years. My mother still has a signed copy of To Kill a Mockingbird that she was given as a birthday present.

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 2 года назад +3

      That is so cool!!

    • @Miley.Lynette.
      @Miley.Lynette. 2 года назад +3

      Wow I was searching her up because I have a program and my speaking part is Harper Lee!

    • @drubb3d
      @drubb3d Год назад +4

      🧢

    • @colinrunciman5166
      @colinrunciman5166 Год назад

      Oh,buetfull!! rgdsColin Runciman Scotland

    • @wanderinggeri8477
      @wanderinggeri8477 3 месяца назад

      @@Miley.Lynette.How did it go?

  • @Flufferz626
    @Flufferz626 6 лет назад +235

    I had the pleasure of meeting this woman face to face. I will never forget it.

    • @laramaui4114
      @laramaui4114 6 лет назад +5

      Flufferz626 undrer what circumstances?

    • @Flufferz626
      @Flufferz626 6 лет назад +32

      Lala Maui an essay contest in Alabama public schools for girl high schoolers interested in writing. It was an awesome opportunity!

    • @valeriafernandez8392
      @valeriafernandez8392 5 лет назад +2

      @@Flufferz626 Really? you're so lucky

    • @308W82
      @308W82 4 года назад +5

      Wow! That's incredible! Only a handful of people ever get to meet a legendary artist! I'm sure you'll treasure the experience...forever!

    • @roryridge4242
      @roryridge4242 4 года назад +3

      @@laramaui4114 great question. Fluffer , do tell us about it.

  • @paulpinargote5199
    @paulpinargote5199 8 лет назад +372

    It's amazing she has one of the most famous books ever and she completely stayed away from the media for 50 years!
    R.I.P

    • @jillbohaty4400
      @jillbohaty4400 6 лет назад +2

      Paul Pinargote Da

    • @fairlind
      @fairlind 5 лет назад +14

      Paul Pinargote Not amazing to me. I can't imagine anything worse than the loss of privacy that comes with fame.

    • @johnchambers2996
      @johnchambers2996 4 года назад +4

      J. D. Salinger just brought a farm and he and his wife never looked back.

    • @activeone
      @activeone 4 года назад +1

      @@johnchambers2996 well that's a lie.

    • @johnchambers2996
      @johnchambers2996 4 года назад +2

      @@activeone How so? That's what I read when he died.

  • @chumlankithan1545
    @chumlankithan1545 6 лет назад +148

    She speaks so steady. I'm so privileged and honored to hear her voice. Thank you.

    • @CatsHateSoup
      @CatsHateSoup 6 лет назад +7

      Chumlan Kithan1 Same, I wouldn’t care if she were reading the instructions on a ramen packet, I just wanted to hear her voice.

    • @zsedcftglkjh
      @zsedcftglkjh 3 года назад +1

      Get a grip.

  • @brandinunes6334
    @brandinunes6334 6 месяцев назад +5

    I will never regret naming my child after Harper Lee. I hope my daughter grows up to love her as much as I do.

  • @radawson1018
    @radawson1018 4 года назад +40

    💚her description of Southern childhood back when imagination reigned supreme. In our 21st century world, so homogenized by television, with access to everything via the internet, imagination is far less needed. Plus, HL did not need the spotlight, a choice not understood by our media-hungry environment. Many thanks to the station that posted this rare gift.💙

    • @roryridge4242
      @roryridge4242 4 года назад +3

      When I kick the kids off their devices, hours later they can be found outside with elaborate imagination going on... Kids today still have the power! They just need to be given the opportunity, or a little nudge every now and then.

  • @kurtsiecolferites2160
    @kurtsiecolferites2160 4 года назад +54

    RIP, Harper Lee. Thank you for giving us such a powerful and important story. Both the book and the movie are incredibly moving. I remember reading the book in the office in school and just breaking down and crying when Tom Robinson was murdered. It was so unfair. So, so unfair.

  • @JustSomeCanadianGuy
    @JustSomeCanadianGuy 2 года назад +12

    My English teacher said she went to visit Monroeville, Alabama one day and she visited the post office and as she was leaving she saw this sweet old lady and she did a double take... and it was Harper Lee!
    And they talked for a bit and she said she was amazing!

  • @kirsteni.russell5903
    @kirsteni.russell5903 5 лет назад +46

    It's wonderful to hear this writer speak. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is a great book, and this interview sheds light on the author who wrote it.

    • @pmacc3557
      @pmacc3557 2 года назад +1

      Yes Kirsten. Im reading it again at the moment. Its a classic

  • @xsrclose3207
    @xsrclose3207 3 года назад +17

    Southerners entertain ourselves by talking and telling stories.... so true! The theater was not available in Southern cultures...
    They were the most connected to nature and imagination 💞

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 3 года назад +4

      I love how she explained how the people of the south are storytellers. I'm originally from El Paso, Texas and I remember listening to the adults talking about things past. If they spoke about family members or neighbors it wasn't gossip, but out of concern for them. Now I'm almost 74 and I'm the storyteller and the keeper of the flame.

  • @kublitokhan1564
    @kublitokhan1564 5 лет назад +29

    A beautifully written piece of literature displaying this woman’s rich and powerful imagination.

    • @gooodies4u1
      @gooodies4u1 8 месяцев назад

      Thus was not imagination. This was life in the south

  • @lolotaeja3911
    @lolotaeja3911 3 года назад +15

    Astonishingly exceptional piece of work by any standard. Produced by a brilliant, reclusive, ordinary person disinterested in fame. An American classic of the highest order.

    • @catkeys6911
      @catkeys6911 2 года назад +1

      She was very private, she wasn't reclusive. She loved hanging out with friends, and going on fishing excursions. When in NY, she'd go to ball games (a Mets fan) and visit museums.

  • @bamalifecooperative5969
    @bamalifecooperative5969 3 года назад +9

    I live in Monroe County Alabama we're miss lee was from! My mother knew her well as miss lee would come by my mother's workplace and visit her as miss lee was doing her laundry!

  • @LB-pg3no
    @LB-pg3no 4 года назад +13

    Wonderfully written book, such a very talented writer!
    Her speaking style is as interesting as her writings! What a wonderful and intelligent lady! I wish she would have written many more novels, she was so very talented!
    My favorite book and movie!!!

  • @SarasAnimals
    @SarasAnimals 2 года назад +7

    I love listening to her the way I loved listening to Shelby Foote and his commentary in Ken Burns’ Civil War. A rich, musical accent that conveys so much about life in the southern states.

  • @kennethprice8710
    @kennethprice8710 3 года назад +8

    This is a great and revealing interview listening to her speak about small southern town life is very educational.🌟

  • @exluvah
    @exluvah 5 лет назад +11

    I am so thankful to have had the opportunity to hear this.

  • @Ziegler-boothBlogspot
    @Ziegler-boothBlogspot 8 лет назад +79

    Thank you for sharing this fascinating interview with Harper Lee on RUclips.

  • @amanmehta2303
    @amanmehta2303 4 месяца назад +1

    The fact that I am a contemporary of Harper Lee being only 20 years old makes me happy.

  • @ninabernel5383
    @ninabernel5383 6 лет назад +20

    Still my favorite book.

  • @buttheclouds
    @buttheclouds 10 месяцев назад +3

    Such a needed book! And so comprehensible! No symbolism, no multiple narrators, no difficult vocabulary, a happy ending, the development of innocence to adulthood, absolutely everything you would want in a novel. Take that, so -called American classics like Moby-Dick!

    • @Surfing_Pikachu
      @Surfing_Pikachu 4 месяца назад

      try telling an English teacher that there's no symbolism XD

  • @diecastcupseries7317
    @diecastcupseries7317 Год назад +4

    Harper Lee actually assisted Truman Capote in doing interviews with residents and law enforcement officers in Kansas who were involved in searching for criminals Perry Smith and Richard Hickock who were executed by hanging for the 1959 murders of the Clutter Family in Holcomb, Kansas for his book "In Cold Blood". They made a movie later on based on the book like they did wit Harper's book "To kill a Mockingbird".

  • @madeleinebelle2105
    @madeleinebelle2105 2 года назад +3

    She fired my senses and childhood memories of Nature and imagination...never heard anyone talk of the South in such a way...she seemed a very down to earth woman...ty.

  • @powfoot4946
    @powfoot4946 Год назад +14

    I love where she says "southern folk are not particularly sophisticated, not worldly wise". It makes me think of Atticus finch, someone who is widely considered one of the greatest, noblest characters in fiction. Nothing he says or does is particularly wise, he just sticks to his core values and does good. It is within all of us to become a man like Atticus.

  • @308W82
    @308W82 4 года назад +28

    This is one of the finest youtube clips I've ever seen! Every single word, phrase and sentence Harper Lee utters is pure poetry. A master story teller, we've been gifted with one masterpiece for the ages, and now this interview -- a brief, poetic glimpse into the mind of one of the world's finest artists, who's work will endure forever.

  • @mipacker
    @mipacker 5 лет назад +11

    This is an absolutely fascinating interview. She is absolutely brilliant in a way that is hard to define.

  • @MrSteve280
    @MrSteve280 4 года назад +14

    She has a natural gift of story telling when she's simply talking. Reminds me much of Shelby Foote.

    • @lynnbertron1621
      @lynnbertron1621 2 года назад +3

      Couldn't put my finger on who she reminded of, your so right. It's Shelby
      Foote.

  • @GTSConsulting
    @GTSConsulting 9 месяцев назад +1

    The fact that we can hear her voice before seeing the Broadway production simply brings the story to life! Thank you!

  • @pattykemper2010
    @pattykemper2010 Год назад +3

    Excellent description about growing up in the south and why it produced such good storytellers. I grew up in a small southern town and remember and heard many stories from our elders. They were wonderful to listen to.

  • @stockvaluedotcom
    @stockvaluedotcom 3 года назад +6

    The best and most brilliant explanation why Southern writers dominate the greatest American Literature.

  • @paulsolon6229
    @paulsolon6229 Год назад +5

    Her face her resembles the face of scout in the movie.
    Once she said that scout is her as a kid

  • @helgemrklid404
    @helgemrklid404 4 года назад +21

    oh, that sweet Southern accent

  • @arrowcrusher
    @arrowcrusher 3 года назад +11

    Her voice is Angelic.... She is my spiritual family... she also made a mediocre interviewer feel so comfortable and inflated his ego.. I bet Roy never had another interview even close to this one.. Harper Lee was and still is an Angel and her spirit has never died

    • @stockvaluedotcom
      @stockvaluedotcom 3 года назад +2

      In fairness he gave her space to tell the story instead of interrupting as so many modern interviewers do. That she was so evocative of why Southern writers dominate American literature tells me he couldn't have been too bad.

  • @Abrahamq123
    @Abrahamq123 6 лет назад +14

    Thank you for having this interview available to us!

  • @pnkjthakuri2010
    @pnkjthakuri2010 4 года назад +6

    man the accents so cool harpers lee my legend and my boss

  • @fosterhellendoorn4656
    @fosterhellendoorn4656 3 года назад +8

    Loved her command of the english language. Also the information of ethnicity of southern states.

    • @JS-ti8ny
      @JS-ti8ny 4 месяца назад

      Shelby Foote is another one

  • @flanplan5903
    @flanplan5903 3 года назад +8

    I could imagine an adult Scout speaking like this...

  • @amirajamil8113
    @amirajamil8113 3 года назад +6

    I had a first copy. My sister had to read it in high school and passed it on to me. Unfortunate for me I read it to tatters but I have both her books now. Growing up in small town I can relate.

  • @monsterjazzlicks
    @monsterjazzlicks 7 лет назад +12

    This is the first time I have learned anything of her. It was such a fascinating 10 x minutes!

  • @danocable
    @danocable 6 лет назад +34

    Alongside the Grapes of Wrath,One of the all time greats.

  • @nandixon1247
    @nandixon1247 2 дня назад

    I loved the book and the movid. I lived just north of Monroeville.,in a small town of Beatrice. This was in1971 through 1973. Racism was very strong in that area. I was from Mobile originally.

  • @paolomisul
    @paolomisul 2 года назад +1

    Questa donna 60 anni fa, mi ha cambiato la vita...grazie

  • @paulsolon6229
    @paulsolon6229 Год назад +2

    Insightful
    Thank you

  • @slippingmaggots
    @slippingmaggots 9 месяцев назад +2

    I think its really cool how she only spoke on her book once even though it is so important in literature today, taught all over the world. I read it once in 8th grade, not fully understanding everything that was being read to me snd now in 10th i understand alot more in the book (2 year difference does make a difference).

  • @dougmoore50
    @dougmoore50 Год назад +2

    All of the things that influenced Nellie Harper Lee's writing, all of them; The first time she intentionally studied her mirror reflection; The inescapable influence of family; The small town dusty streets she walked in childhood; The newspapers she read; The stories she heard from adults and kids; The things that caused her to hide under her blankets in the middle of the night; The crackling am radio broadcasts she persistently sought out; The first time she was able to work past the discomfort of oppressive heat and humidity and to revel in both; The first time she noticed the simple yet indomitable beauty of a flower, The first time she comprehended both the real and imagined ugliness of some human behaviors; The imagination of her own young mind stimulated by the natural world, rather than by technology. The first time she observed that a gnarled cavity in an old tree trunk could be used as a hiding place for small treasures; The stealthy gratitude in finding them and later on the greater satisfaction of gifting treasures; Her childhood pals, whose ultimate value would not be fully embraced until she understood the harsh realities of fleeting time; The encouraging whispers of her first editor and author friends; Every single word she had written until then; All of them converged in the beauty of her first published work, the treasure of "To Kill A Mockingbird".
    Brilliantly written in 1960, (Pulitzer Prize in '61) It was the perfect novel at a perfect time. It helped to assert for the first time in some and reassert in others a fundamental goodness, that by the very nature of how it made us feel, we knew it to be satisfying, grounding and right.
    It was, and remains, in my humble opinion, a crucial voice in the necessary development of our species and in the individual and collective bonds we forge.

  • @mustangbeauty4
    @mustangbeauty4 6 лет назад +12

    It's surprising that this amazing and emotional book is now being shown in most American schools. I'm not saying it's a bad thing, I think it's a great thing. Thank you, R.I.P.

  • @ladyoftheveil8342
    @ladyoftheveil8342 3 года назад +3

    I have two books in me hopefully cousin Nell will inspire me . I Grew up in rural south Alabama in the 70’s

  • @arrowcrusher
    @arrowcrusher 5 лет назад +3

    I'm so blessed to know that this exist

  • @peggylamb552
    @peggylamb552 4 года назад +7

    my fav movie !!

    • @delg1211
      @delg1211 3 года назад

      To KM is one of the few movies that reaches the book

  • @metamorphosis828
    @metamorphosis828 6 лет назад +5

    My all time favorite book

  • @Orfeo68
    @Orfeo68 5 лет назад +3

    This is awesome!!

  • @izacnewton5761
    @izacnewton5761 Год назад +3

    what a treasure!

  • @missdee4927
    @missdee4927 9 месяцев назад +2

    I read she did so much press to promote the book that it turned her off giving interviews completely. Another reason RUclips is amazing. I get to hear this reclusive writer who stayed far away from the press for 50 years.

  • @cherylbean5881
    @cherylbean5881 Год назад +2

    Amazing book

  • @RobbieBlue
    @RobbieBlue 4 года назад +6

    Very intelligent woman!

  • @blessOTMA
    @blessOTMA 2 года назад +3

    "So many writers don't like to write" 😂 True!

  • @brucefranklin1317
    @brucefranklin1317 2 года назад +2

    Miss lee was a deep beautiful southern woman the men need to learn from her.

  • @nonebusiness6583
    @nonebusiness6583 2 года назад +3

    She certainly describes Southerners and growing up Southern to a tee.

  • @studywithnyushella4184
    @studywithnyushella4184 2 года назад +2

    The best writer

  • @robinrubendunst869
    @robinrubendunst869 2 года назад +8

    She was born to write this book and to live her life for herself. And that's enough. I don't know why she never published anything ever again (until Go Set a Watchman, but that was after her death).

    • @jeanettecollins694
      @jeanettecollins694 Год назад

      A professor at SMU teaches this novel in his classes. He said most ppl believe Watchman came after Mockingbird, but this is untrue. He declared the Watchman was a terrible novel and Harper Lee took some of the elements from Watchman then wrote Mockingbird.

  • @bjnwright
    @bjnwright 8 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing she thought it would never sell. She was just hoping to get some encouragement.

  • @victoria_atmosphere9290
    @victoria_atmosphere9290 5 лет назад +15

    I guess Harper Lee was Scout but she in some way she was, or became Boo Radley as well.

  • @colettanicholsonnicholson1533
    @colettanicholsonnicholson1533 4 года назад +5

    I love the old South. She made my heart understand why .

  • @EsotericOccultist
    @EsotericOccultist 4 года назад +5

    She sounds cool

  • @littlered-hm9hs
    @littlered-hm9hs 6 лет назад +7

    She's so cute!!!!!

  • @atoriyan9254
    @atoriyan9254 3 года назад +1

    Continued success

  • @hatnanjo
    @hatnanjo 5 лет назад +24

    HAD TO DO THIS FOR HOMEWORK #YEAR9

  • @theesperanzacompromisebyja9044
    @theesperanzacompromisebyja9044 10 месяцев назад +2

    Harper Lee AKA Truman Capote's bodyguard.

  • @jamesschmitz6644
    @jamesschmitz6644 3 года назад +3

    She lived like a regular person .

  • @crazyaces4042
    @crazyaces4042 Месяц назад

    in the TV mini series "in cold blood" I now see that it was shown as if Capote and her were good friends and that she laughed a LOT. I always wondered if that was fake as it didn't seem exactly real or fitting. Philip Seymour Hoffman did a GREAT job acting in that movie whether you like(d) Capote or not. I can't even believe it was him in the movie. It is a tough watch considering what happened to that poor family and who ever all the horrible men's other crimes affected. I was just watching it and started wondering about Harper's book. I did see the movie but it was sort of hard to understand. Gregory Peck did and outstanding job in acting. Either way it sounds like she definitely didn't really enjoy being "famous." Very talented writer especially for her time.

  • @alexy6686
    @alexy6686 5 лет назад +6

    I noticed when reading the book there were many mentions of tribal tendencies, calling families tribes or groups...well she speaks about Southerners as a tribe at 5:10. Just a little interesting thing I noticed.

  • @jazzstandardman
    @jazzstandardman 4 года назад +23

    "All I want to be is a Jane Austen of South Alabama."

  • @kublitokhan1564
    @kublitokhan1564 5 лет назад +24

    Anyone draw parallels between Harper Lee and the reclusive Boo ?

    • @roryridge4242
      @roryridge4242 4 года назад +3

      Yes!

    • @dietz4052
      @dietz4052 3 года назад +2

      Kublito Khan Nelle told someone later in her life that she identified herself with Boo.

    • @lisatraiger2562
      @lisatraiger2562 3 года назад +2

      Yes! just tonight I finished reading the book again - my favorite by a long shot-and at the end during the porch scene while atticus and tate are arguing, it occurred to me that in addition to Scout being somewhat autobiographical, Boo R and his extreme shyness also mirror Miss Lee's preference for privacy.

    • @meganmackenzie5993
      @meganmackenzie5993 2 года назад +2

      Late to the party, but there's a BBC documentary about TKaM where a neighbor tells about a man in their town who was a shut-in like Arthur "Boo" Radley, who was likely Lee's inspiration.

  • @larrymasterspowerbuildingc4477
    @larrymasterspowerbuildingc4477 6 лет назад +8

    where was the discussion about the book?

  • @maricelg.2363
    @maricelg.2363 3 года назад

    New friend here stay connected

  • @derickblacido2267
    @derickblacido2267 7 лет назад +27

    This is a good interview. but common. He did not ask about the novel. Actually, there was a set of question about it. How she was inspired, and if that book was his autobiography indirectly and so on. Oh, my god¡. He lost a good opportunity at asking her. A great deception.

    • @ThomasOAkden
      @ThomasOAkden 4 года назад +4

      Derick Blacido Contreras true, but sometimes these things have value just in that you can meet the person beyond their accomplishments or success. It’s maybe more of a credit to the interviewer that they instead kept away from the cliches she was probably asked all her life.

    • @Deborah4Antiques
      @Deborah4Antiques 4 года назад +3

      @@ThomasOAkden I think he let her express herself which is her, what I tuned in to hear.

  • @cjourneys5785
    @cjourneys5785 2 года назад

    👌

  • @robinrubendunst869
    @robinrubendunst869 2 года назад +1

    "small town, middle-class Southern life . . . is passing."

  • @CatsHateSoup
    @CatsHateSoup 6 лет назад +1

    What book was she working on if she had already written Go Set A Watchman?

    • @valeriafernandez8392
      @valeriafernandez8392 5 лет назад

      Yep, i think so

    • @iVenge
      @iVenge 5 лет назад +2

      It is doubtful that she ever wrote that book.

    • @kelman727
      @kelman727 3 года назад +1

      ...which was an early draft for Mockingbird.
      The book she is talking about was non-fiction, which she eventually shelved.

  • @sexytaco33
    @sexytaco33 6 лет назад +10

    im here for school

  • @Nitro_Joe
    @Nitro_Joe 6 лет назад +15

    This is an interesting interview; however, it felt like it took 30 minutes to get less than 10 minutes of information. This interview give a new meaning to SLOW!

  • @lostindiancamp
    @lostindiancamp 7 лет назад +18

    I wonder if she stayed away from interviews in order to not have questions about her sexuality? It was known she was gay and had a relationship with her editor. Her being gay is one reason she and Truman Capote were so close.

    • @kenhill3618
      @kenhill3618 6 лет назад +6

      being gay then and denying or being scraed of discrimination would also explain her deep empathy

    • @iVenge
      @iVenge 5 лет назад +3

      It would be more accurate to say that she was asexual.

    • @missdee4927
      @missdee4927 9 месяцев назад +2

      It was known? The only thing I've read about her love life was she had an unrequited crush on her male literary agent. I think she just lived her life with no romantic relationships.

  • @billk7541
    @billk7541 Месяц назад

    Sadly, the South that Ms. Harper describes is almost long gone. Of course, there are pockets here and there, but for the most part the South is like any other place in the U.S.A.

  • @casperroyall745
    @casperroyall745 3 года назад +2

    i once had diarrhea in my moms ikea

  • @SJam491
    @SJam491 3 месяца назад

    The South didn't get its first major league baseball team until 1966.

  • @m.areviews5738
    @m.areviews5738 6 лет назад +1

    2018

  • @ladyoftheveil8342
    @ladyoftheveil8342 3 года назад +1

    My distant cousin Nell

  • @mavvd1301
    @mavvd1301 Год назад

    Spécialité LLCE tu connais

  • @kylek65
    @kylek65 4 года назад +6

    R.I.P my social life because doing this for school.

  • @sibam_debnath
    @sibam_debnath 3 года назад

    Today i buy a book "to kill a mockingbird" that reason i do comment section.

  • @Exxot1K
    @Exxot1K 3 года назад +2

    lol

  • @ethanxie
    @ethanxie Год назад

    Yo les bg

  • @TheGreatAlan75
    @TheGreatAlan75 4 года назад +3

    Harper Lee was my mother. RIP mom. you were the greatest of the great.

  • @QIQ_Q_I_LA_SCVE________
    @QIQ_Q_I_LA_SCVE________ 5 лет назад

    Ronny J

  • @riarjakuchprsenior2739
    @riarjakuchprsenior2739 8 лет назад +11

    I seriously used to think Harper Lee was a man or the owner of Harper Collins....XD
    Peace!

    • @tayyabakhan2257
      @tayyabakhan2257 7 лет назад +2

      its an amazing book. no doubt. remarkable peice of literature

  • @thibaultl1956
    @thibaultl1956 3 года назад +1

    It's sad that such a skilled author would attribute so much of her success to "tribal instincts."

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 2 года назад +1

      But if she meant southerners as a group told stories and performed drama, and she absorbed that cultural bent (to say nothing of the Celtic storytelling history), why is that sad, and not just true?

  • @iLowfy
    @iLowfy 3 года назад +1

    not epic didnt laugh

  • @j.louisv.123
    @j.louisv.123 3 года назад +1

    Excellent writing but mostly the book stereotypes the Southern black man. No black man of that time and place would enter a white women's house when both would be alone. So that part makes zero sense.

  • @oliverandreasson3978
    @oliverandreasson3978 5 лет назад +4

    HAD TO DO THIS FOR HOMEWORK #YEAR11