She is in a nursing home, and there is big speculation that she is being taken advantage of, and that really has no idea they are going to publish what was essentially a rough draft of To Kill a Mockingbird.
And yes I read the book and saw the movie as a small child.
it was banned in America at one time and harper life was made hell
It was?? I didn't know that! Mmm that's interesting. I wonder if it was banned here in Canada too? Google time!
Removed (2009) from the St. Edmund Campion*Secondary School classrooms in Brampton Ontario, Canada because a parent objected to*language used in the novel, including the word “n*****."
http://www.ala.org/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/classics/reasons
Thank you for googling for me.
According to your link, it shows that only one school and one town in all of Canada had banned this book. Thats pretty good IMO.
It's pretty interesting though reading about the banishments, burnings, removals and challenges of a variety of classics from many schools and towns.
You're welcome
It is an interesting site... I was shocked at a few and knew some ... but it went into details that I found intriguing. ..
Removed (2009) from the St. Edmund Campion*Secondary School classrooms in Brampton Ontario, Canada because a parent objected to*language used in the novel, including the word “n*****."
http://www.ala.org/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/classics/reasons
YOU KIDDING...using that language was the point of the book
Covering up the fact that the word was used casually in the past doesn't help teach young people how to behave morally though. The more we expose them to things, the wiser they'll be. Kids make their own decisions whether we want them to or not; giving them all the facts will lead them to the best decision.Yes, but sadly the US is a bit odd... back in the day more so... morals were a high value especially among women and childern... even the softest of swear words were the devils work....
Covering up the fact that the word was used casually in the past doesn't help teach young people how to behave morally though. The more we expose them to things, the wiser they'll be. Kids make their own decisions whether we want them to or not; giving them all the facts will lead them to the best decision.
Yes, but sadly the US is a bit odd... back in the day more so... morals were a high value especially among women and childern... even the softest of swear words were the devils work....