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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: Beautiful
Review: "To Kill a Mockingbird"" is obviously one of the best American novels of the 20th Century. It is the story of a young girl, Scout Finch, growing up in Alabama during the 1930s-40s. She lives with her brother and father, the often referenced Atticus Finch. Her father has been appointed to represent a black man being tried for allegedly raping a white woman. The novel deals with the Finch family's persecution for Atticus's role in doing what he knows to be right, and specifically, how these events affect Scout's view of the world as she grows up.

The picture Harper Lee paints in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is of an honest, noble man and his struggle to raise his children as a single parent in the impoverished Deep South of the early 20th century. They live in a neighborhood of several eclectic personalities, from the brooding, misunderstood Mrs. Dubose, to the mysterious Radley family. The Alabama Ms. Lee portrays is a beautiful rural arrangement of small towns and counties, with many wonderful, honest citizens, who are unfortunately overshadowed by the hateful actions of others.

"To Kill a Mockingbird" is one of the most beautiful stories I've ever read, and it left me occasionally saddened, but ultimately proud of my homeland, the American South.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a powerful story of human integrity!
Review: To Kill A Mockingbird is set in a small town in Alabama during the early 1930s. The main plot centers around the trial of Tom Robinson, a black man falsely accused of the rape of a white girl. It is within this context that Atticus, the town's gentleman and defense attorney, teaches his children humanity and truth. The story is narrated by an adult Jean Louise (Scout), recalling the events of her childhood leading up to and after the trial. Tom is convicted and sentenced to death - not surprising given the era, any other outcome of the trial would have rendered this novel trite and significantly diminished its value. The trial is without a doubt among the most well written scenes I've ever experienced in American fiction. Tom's accuser represents the complete antithesis of honor, respect, and decency. I applaud Lee for delivering biblical comeuppance to the accuser in a swiftly paced yet suspenseful narrative that made me anxious to get to the next sentence.

Lee introduces the right characters in the right setting with exacting language to support the theme of the novel. This is perhaps the nations' most well written lesson on the personal depravation caused by racial hatred and the spiritual enlightenment encountered when one stands defiant in the face of it. And what better way to demonstrate this moral message than through the eyes of children who know nothing but truth, until told otherwise. Lee would be hard pressed to top this novel, perhaps that's why she hasn't tried. This is a novel that children should grow up with, its bound to produce better adults. Most certainly worthy of the Pulitzer and deserving of it's place in the history of American fiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Flagship of American Novels
Review: We happily add our voices to the chorus praising this novel. Harper Lee's inspired story is a beacon for souls searching for humanity, social justice, and human connection. We laughed, and we cried. We were stirred by the words of Atticus Finch. This spring, we will share our passion for this book through a workshop for readers new to Ms. Lee's novel. Wish us luck, although with this book, we won't need it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A novel of unsurpassed beauty
Review: How many people when asked to name their favorite book of all time can pare it down to one? I can, easily. This fine, fine novel is, in fact, degraded by referring to it as a "great book." It is no less than one of the greatest works of art of the 20th century. To read it is a life changing experience. Considering that I first read it 25 years ago and am now singing its praises via a media that was not yet invented at that time is a testament to this fact. I will not labor to offer a synopsis of the book as these are already offered in abundance. Let me just say that with each subsequent perusal of this book, I am equally delighted and saddened that I am not discovering it for the first time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Where words fail me...
Review: Harper Lee has written something pure magical. Yet every sentence is so natural and naive. When reading To Kill a Mockingbird I just asked myself, "How can someone, having written no other story or novel in her entire life, write something this catching and beautiful?" This is one of the novels I cant put into words what I think of. It's just unbelievable. Father Atticus is a father that you wouldn't believe coulde exist, even in fiction. I dont think anyone can critize this novel, and still those who does, I dont know what crazy motive they have for it. It's simply something that you read and what you've read never escapes you again. And still you read it over and over again, thoroughout your life!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: To Kill A Mockingbird
Review: The book To Kill A Mockingbird is a good book! The plot was just about two kids and what happened one summer. I liked the book because Harper Lee did a good job at describing the charaters. My favorite character in the book was Jean Luise Finch (Scout). She did not act like a little girl, she acted like a boy throughout the whole book. Jem was an okay character but he got boring because he grew up and his sister grew up but she still acted like a boy. I recommend this book to everybody because it will hold your attention throughout the whole book. Nothing in the book is worth disliking!!!! To me the book did not have a lesson but to other people it might.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Respected
Review: This book was very boring at first, but once I got to the fifteenth chapter, it actually started getting ok. Even though it seemed like a chore to have to read this book for english class and I definately would not put it on my "recommended list" I learned to respect it because of the issues it dealt with. Racism is still an evil today, but it was even more severe in the thirties. This book was written in the sixties, published in 1967, when racism was not regarded as "horrible" and we were on the verge of abolishing segregation, and Harper Lee wrote of these issues before many others did.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Children learn about justice
Review: This fine novel talks about justice and courage. The narrator is a young girl, Scout Finch, who lives in Alabama in the 30's and shares her summertime adventures with her brother and their friend Dill. Before the core of the action starts, we are witnesses to their innocent life in the middle of a town crossed by racism and violence. It reminds us of how we lived in our small but pleasant worlds, not knowing the things that adults do. But as it happens to most of us, one day something happened that ripped that innocence and forced the kids to see the real world, in the form of an unexplainable injustice. A black man is accused of rape and murder by a white girl. Atticus Finch, Scout's father, accepts to defend the man. Through the trial, we see injustice and hatred everywhere, except in Atticus' strong attitude and firm principles. By the end, the kids will experience personally the agression and injustice of this world.

Although not a first-level literary prowess, this book deserves the love most of its readers feel for it. Besides being well written, its message is universal and true. There are more elaborate and sophisticated treatments of the subject, but that in no way diminishes its value. Harper Lee is good at speaking with the voice of a child: this is very difficult and often results in corny or artificial efforts. One good thing is exactly that children's world is portrayed as innocent but by no means stupid: children are keen observers and get their own conclusions. All in all, a good novel worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: To Kill A Mockingbird-a bestseller for all time
Review: Scout is a vivacios, smart tomboy in a small southern town. There are many subplots in To Kill A Mockingbird, that is one of the reasons it is my absolute favourite book ever. This book makes you feel like you want to be a kid again. Maycomb, the small southern town that Scout and her brother and father live in is divided with racism. The family not racist, and the children learned it from their father, Atticus. Atticus takes on a trial near the end of the book. It is involving a white trash woman who claims that a black man raped her. The case is inevitable-the white woman will win, although the evidence clearly states that this man did not rape her. At the end of the trial(I won't tell you which side wins...) I bawled like a baby. You will feel connected to this book somehow. I have read it 3 times in 4 years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A timeless tale
Review: It's amazing how a book that is this short manages to hit on so many different topics. Set in Alabama in the 1930's, the inequality and bigotry of their small town is seen through the eyes of Scout and Jem Finch children of the town lawyer Atticus Finch. This is a book that every parent needs to read, and have their children read. It brings you back to not only the innocence of childhood, but it will make you remember the moment that you yourself, lost that innocense of your childhood. Told in local dialect it also gives you a glimpse into the charming Southern life that they were leading.


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