In the Times write up yesterday, their reporter suggests that 'History will overlook Watchman while Mockingbird lives on'.
" ... Until the news emerged of a forgotten manuscript in February last year, Lee was part of that elite group of one-hit wonders. To Kill a Mockingbird, her novel of 1960, sat very well alongside Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights. Both of them great novels unsullied by other inferior works by the same hand. JD Salinger made the mistake of carrying on writing after Catcher in the Rye. Did we really need Franny and Zooey? No, was the answer of the book-buying public."
Firstly, how valid is the opinion of the book-buying public, especially when it is so often sullied by the opinions of the critics?
Secondly, could the sales of 'Watchman' rise following Lee's demise?
Harper, RIP.