From one of America’s most beloved authors, a posthumous
collection of newly discovered short stories and previously published essays
and magazine pieces, offering a fresh perspective on the remarkable literary
mind of Harper Lee.
Harper Lee remains a landmark figure in the American canon –
thanks to Scout, Jem, Atticus, and the other indelible characters in her
Pulitzer-winning debut, To Kill a Mockingbird; as well as for the
darker, late-’50s version of small-town Alabama that emerged in Go Set
a Watchman, her only other novel, published in 2015 after its rediscovery.
Less remembered, until now, however, is Harper Lee the dogged young writer, who
crafted stories in hopes of magazine publication; Lee the lively New Yorker,
Alabamian, and friend to Truman Capote; and the Lee who peppered the pages
of McCall’s and Vogue with thoughtful essays
in the latter part of the twentieth century.
The Land of Sweet Forever combines Lee’s early
short fiction and later nonfiction in a volume offering an unprecedented look
at the development of her inimitable voice. Covering territory from the Alabama
schoolyards of Lee’s youth to the luncheonettes and movie houses of midcentury
Manhattan, The Land of Sweet Forever invites still-vital
conversations about politics, equality, travel, love, fiction, art, the
American South, and what it means to lead an engaged and creative life.
This collection comes with an introduction by Casey Cep,
Harper Lee’s appointed biographer, which provides illuminating background for
our reading of these stories and connects them both to Lee’s life and to her
two novels.
About the Author
Harper Lee was born in 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama. One of
America’s most celebrated and influential writers, she is the author of the
acclaimed novels To Kill a Mockingbird and Go Set a
Watchman as well as the story and essay collection, The Land
of Sweet Forever, published posthumously in 2025. Lee was
awarded numerous literary awards and honors including the Pulitzer Prize for
Fiction and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She died in 2016 at the age of
eight-nine.
Casey Cep is at work on the authorized biography
of Harper Lee. A staff writer at The New Yorker, she is the
author of the bestselling book Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and
the Last Trial of Harper Lee. She was born and raised on the Eastern Shore
of Maryland, where she still lives with her family.