Arts & Entertainment
Towson Bookseller Celebrates 'Go Set a Watchman' Release
Barnes and Noble bookstores will open two hours early on Tuesday with special promotions for the release of "To Kill a Mockingbird" sequel.
By MARC TORRENCE
“Since Atlanta, she had looked out the dining-car window with a delight almost physical.”
So begins the most-anticipated novel perhaps in the history of publishing in the United States. Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman goes on sale Tuesday, July 14, and the first chapter was released Friday, adding another layer of excitement to the frenzy of media coverage that has accompanied the publication of Lee’s first book in 55 years.
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The release is not without its fair share of controversy, with a different characterization of hero Atticus Finch shown in this book than in Lee’s only other published work, the classic To Kill a Mockingbird. Still, booksellers across the country are excited for the novel.
Barnes & Noble in Towson is opening early, at 7 a.m.; usually the store opens at 9 a.m. daily.
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Shoppers who buy Go Set a Watchman between 7 and 10 a.m. will receive a free small coffee from the store’s cafe. In addition, the first 20 people to buy the book will get a free Barnes & Noble To Kill a Mockingbird tote bag.
“Everyone at Barnes & Noble is excited for the launch of Go Set a Watchman, which we expect to be the number one book when it’s released on July 14 and one of our top-selling books this year and beyond,” said Mary Amicucci, vice president of adult trade and children’s books at Barnes & Noble.
“There’s a built-in audience for Go Set a Watchman because To Kill a Mockingbird is one of the most widely read backlist books we have, with sales doubling at Barnes & Noble this year alone,” she added. “Generations of adults and teens have shared Scout’s story, and with Go Set a Watchman, they can revisit many of their favorite characters from To Kill a Mockingbird again.”
Lee’s new novel takes place about 20 years after the events of To Kill A Mockingbird, which won a Pulitzer Prize and is regarded as one of the greatest works in the history of American literature.
The new novel, like the old, is told from the point of view of Scout Finch. Chapter One follows Scout as she journeys home to Maycomb, Ala., from New York City.
Without giving away plot points or spoilers, a few updates to some characters and events already have some readers surprised and upset.
Lee, now 89, still lives in Monroeville, Ala., the town for which fictional Maycomb is modeled. With her health declining, many have questioned whether she was competent enough to approve the release of the manuscript, which was found by her lawyer in 2014.
The state of Alabama opened an elder-abuse investigation against Lee’s lawyer, Tonja B. Carter, but found Lee was capable of giving consent to the publication of the novel.
Read the first chapter of Go Set A Watchman here, accompanied by audio of a passenger rail rolling along its tracks.
Image courtesy Harper Collins
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