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To Kill a Mockingbird : The 40th Anniversary Edition of the Pulitzer Prize-Winning Novel

To Kill a Mockingbird : The 40th Anniversary Edition of the Pulitzer Prize-Winning Novel

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great classic book with a great storyline
Review: I had read this book in high school and had forgotten how great a book this was. This book has so much in the story that makes you think and alot of it makes you relate to real life.

The character's in story reach out to you in way that makes you feel like you are in there world. Scout was one of my favorite charactors the way she was through the book. My other favorite charactor is Jem. I love how both of the kids were afraid of so much but from there fear they learned so much. I also love how they stood by people in the story.

Overall I forgot just how good this classic novel this was and I wish Harper Lee had written more books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: No wonder it's a classic...
Review: I just finished this book a few moments ago, and I am completely awed by this story. Harper Lee has done an excellent job bringing this 1930s Alabama childhood to life. I can see why To Kill a Mockingbird has won the Pulitzer Prize, garnered an Academy Award for the movie version, and ultimately become a timely classic enjoyed by many generations.

To Kill a Mockingbird tells the story of two children, sister Scout and brother Jem, and their childhood during three years in the midst of the Great Depression. Scout and Jem spend most of their summers with their summer-neighbor, Dill, making up plays and spying on the town recluse, Boo Radley. During the school year (minus Dill, who goes back home to Mississippi), Scout finds herself in trouble one too many times and struggles with the concept of being a lady, especially when all she wants to do is wear overalls and beat up her classmates.

Then everything changes one fall.... Scout and Jem's father, Atticus Finch, a lawyer in their town of Maycomb, Alabama, is appointed to the defense of Tom Robinson, a black man accused of raping a white woman (although not of the highest caliber), Mayella Ewell. The fact of this case rocks the town of Maycomb, and with Scout and Jem feeling the brunt of their classmates ridicule when they realize Atticus is on Tom's side.

I was simply floored while reading this novel. I wasn't expecting a "classic" to be so readable. Now I know what I've been missing! To Kill a Mockingbird is a piece of our American history that depicts racism and prejudice, childhood innocence, and the perseverence of a man who risked it all to stand up for what he believed in. Wonderful portrayal and one I will read again.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD
Review: I think that this book is a great way to portray the many life difficulties in every way. It is neat how the author encorporates the title of the book into the nvel itself. Lee has a great ability to catch the reader's attention when she wants to. Also, the characters she has in the novel are interesting because they all have different personalities and character traits. However, this is not the number-one book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A deeply moving tale of prejudice and malevolence
Review: Another book for English class that I developed a strong attachment to. It's definitely one of the best modern novels that have been written! For those of you that haven't the slightest clue what this book is about...

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is a story of growing up, the childhood of Scout and Jem Finch in a small town in Alabama in the 1930's. Their father, Atticus, is a respectable lawyer, given the job of defending Tom Robinson, a black man who is accused of raping a white woman. It's a very dark theme that inhabits this innocent world of youthfulness, but that is part of the plot: to describe the loss of innocence and the maturing of the children in their views and actions in the face of various social issues such as prejudice and class distinction. While being told from a child's point of view runs really deep and you'll be surprised by how intelligent Scout and Jem are. The title, "To Kill a Mockingbird" is explained on pg. 90 of the book, declaring the sin of murdering the helpless and innocent. The story is told in a flashback, by Scout, who recounts the events between her 5 and 9 years of age, the events leading up to her brother Jem's broken arm.

...Now don't think this book is totally dreary and hateful - most of the characters (like Scout, Jem, and Dill) are really pleasant and incredibly entertaining. The story takes on the real life approach but it is most relevant and I truly agree that this book is a must-read for everyone.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Why Did Ms. Lee Stop Writing...
Review: Harper Lee I wanted more great reads from you!!

Every writers strives to achieve what came so readily for Ms. Lee with her first and only novel. Every reader (young and old) will have questions. I know I did.

The rage of an era and the ignorance of people. 41 years after the book - people are still angry and ignorant. The people (Finches, Radleys, Ewells, Robinsons, Cunninghams), the town (Maycomb), the crime (rape by a black man of a white woman), the innocence (Scout and Dill), fear (Mayella) and wisdom (Jem) of children - in one book. I first read this classic at 13 years of age. I had so many questions, I drove my mother nuts. Why? Why? Why? Atticus, Cal, Scout, Dill, Jem, Tom, Helen, Maudie, Ms. Stephanie, Aunty, Heck, will always be a part of me. On a scale of 1-10, this read is a 100.

Ms. Lee, wherever you are, whatever you are doing ... Thank you!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: To Kill A Mockingbird
Review: I read To Kill A Mockingbird. This book was about 3 kids in the town of Maycomb. The setting of this stroy was during The Great Depression. The main characters are Jem, Scout & Atticus Finch. They are poor, but luckily for them their dad, Atticus, is an attorney. Jem and Scout meet a boy, Dill, and get into all sorts of mischief throughout the story.
I thought that this book was interesting and learned the true meaning of the title. I thought this book was very meaningful and Lee has written a lot to teach his readers. this book is great for those with time on their hands and prepared for a good text. Harper moves the readers with the profound thoughts and quotes of the characters.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Review of to Kill a Mockingbird
Review: I read the book to Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It is about a little girl as she deals with racism, strange people and good old fun. This book takes place in Maycomb county, Alabama around the 1930's. The main character's name is Scout and she narrates the story.
The other characters in the story are Jem, her brother, Atticus, her father, Boo Radely, a neighbor hardly anyone has seen, Dill a friend visiting for the summer, and other townspeople.
Dill is a great character just from how he acts. A lot of people could relate to him. He is described as fat, short and a "big fibber".
Boo Radley is a neighbor who was believed to have killed a member of his family, who holds most of your suspense in the story, and there is a twist in the end involving him.
I reccomend this book because every page is a thrilling heart-wrenching experience that keeps you wanting more and more!..

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not very good
Review: This book was tremendouly slow, and most of the time boring. I mean no offence to the people who liked this book, but I personally thought it was a borig book. Maybe it's because I like to read books with more action. I did not like this book, it had too little action, and even the climax was not very exiting.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 1 book....one nation
Review: This is a book which I believe that everyone in the entire nation should read some time in their life. The messages from this book are so powerful, yet it is easy and enjoyable to read, so you don't have to be an English expert or a great reader to be able to read this book and get something positive from it. 12 year olds would love this book. This book does a great job of addressing the issue of racism. So if you haven't read this book, then read it right now. Make it the next book you buy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Out of the Mouths of Babes. . . .
Review: With 600+ reviews, I'll spare you the plot details and synopsis. Simply put, I can't think of a better book that has been written in English (or any other language, for that matter). I have taught it for years to my sophomores, and I love teaching it every time. Harper Lee's narration and dialogue are so wonderfully simple and child-like, while dealing with some very serious and heady topics: racism, hatred, and bigotry. She manages to make Scout, who is nine at the beginning of the novel, sound like a nine-year-old--not an easy task. Many authors who have children as narrators fall into the trap of having them sound too young and immature or too adult and sophistocated. Scout sounds like a whiny, impulsive, little brat at times and then makes the most profound and insightful statements at others--as most intelligent children do. . . . This, I believe, is Harper Lee's greatest accomplishment in this novel. Yes, she deals wonderfully with the Nazi movements in Europe, the local racism in Maycomb, and the private prejudices against Boo Radley. However, those issues have been tackled before and since. Never have they been tackled with a narrator such as Scout, however. She brings a naivete, child-like innocence, and humor to the novel and its larger, darker, deeper topics and themes.

Harper Lee deserves so much credit for not trying to outdo herself by writing more books of a similar nature or even, God forbid, a sequel. She said all that needed to be said and stopped talking. Other authors might want to take a lesson from Ms. Lee. In short, no American student should be allowed to receive a high school diploma without having read TKM and writing a pretty darned good essay over it. I'd settle for them just reading it, though. . . . .


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