Reviewed by Whitney @ First Impressions Reviews on
In To Kill A Mockingbird the reader steps into the skin of six year old Scout Finch, living in Maycomb, Alabama during the 1930s. Through Scout and her brother Jem we see the world how ever unfair, through the innocent eyes of a child who slowly grows up and comes to an understanding of her surroundings.
The incident begins with their reclusive neighbor, with the children not being able to leave well enough alone and summer after summer try to get Boo to come out and play. To be honest, the really instigator on this mission with Dill, a precocious little boy who is the master of tall tales. I should also mention that Dill was based on Harper Lee's childhood friend Truman Capote.
Summer ends and School begins, with Scout having difficulty adjusting. Her idea of problem solving is using her fists rather than words, with regular telling-tos by her older (by four years) and wiser brother Jem and rational father Atticus.
Her father is also a lawyer and defends Tom Robinson, a black man accused of raping a white women. With their father being named as a disgrace ice begins to fall in the children's snow globe of a world changing their perspective on everything they thought they once knew. There's no need to reveal the verdict of Mayella Ewell's case, it was 1936 , it was open and shut from the beginning.
No matter how many times it is read To Kill A Mockingbird leaves a strong impact taking more and more away after each reread. Either wishing Atticus Finch was your father or having a better understand of the metaphor in To Kill A Mockingbird "It's a sin to kill a mockingbird. Mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy." This is true on so many levels, a main example of this is the treatment of Boo Radley and Tom Robinson.
I think I will close by reminiscing of the first time I read To Kill A Mockingbird, it was labeled as required reading in ninth grade and remember my teacher saying it was her favorite book. At the tender age of fourteen most of the symbolism went over my head and didn't pick it up again until senior year of high school. Then I had an aha moment, so this is what Mrs. Fields was talking about.
Reading updates
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- 14 July, 2010: Reviewed