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Introduction "You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view until you climb into
his skin and walk around it." (Lee 33) A lawyer's advice to her daughter as he convinces her to go to the school the next
day when she is disappointed with her teacher's orders asking her not to read at home. A novel narrated through the
young eyes of Scout Finch explains how the conscience of a town enduated in prejudice, violence, and hypocrisy is
pricked by a man when he tries to stand for a black man charged with the rape of a white girl. Harper Lee explains in a
zestful way the attitudes of adults to race and class in the Deep South of 1930. Background To kill a Mockingbird is a
Southern Gothic novel and Bildungsroman, written by the America-based author Harper Lee. Published in 1960, it has
become a classic of modern American literature. It is not an autobiography, but the plot and characters are loosely
based on the author's experiences of her childhood and events near her hometown Monroeville, Alabama, in her early
teen. The book is a top-notch example of how the author brings warmth and humor despite dealing with the grave issues
of rape and racial inequality. The historian Joseph Crespino said, "In the twentieth century, To Kill a Mockingbird is
probably the most widely read book dealing with race in America, and its main character, Atticus Finch, the most
enduring fictional image of racial heroism." (Crespino 9-30) Despite its themes, To Kill a Mockingbird has been often
challenged for its use of racial epithets. In 2006, it was ranked ahead of Bible as one book "every adult should read
before they die." (Pauli) Author Mary McDonough Murphy calls the book "an astonishing phenomenon" after collecting
individual impressions of To Kill a Mockingbird by several authors and public figures. (Zipp) About the Author Harper Lee
was born in 1926 to Amasa Coleman Lee and Frances Cunningham Finch in the Southern town of Monroeville, Alabama,
where she spent her early childhood. She attended local schools for primary education. Subsequently, Lee went to
Montgomery to attend Huntingdon College and wrote stories on racial injustice for campus literary magazines: Huntress.
She continued writing on racial injustice, even after going to Alabama University. In 1950, when Lee moved to New York
to work as a reservation clerk at British Overseas Airways Corporation, she began writing about the people of
Monroeville. But soon, she got financial aid from her friends and started as a full-time writer. With the help of an editor,
Therese von Hohoff Torrey, she transformed a series of anecdotes into To Kill a Mockingbird. After the publishers
rejected the title, Lee suggested 'To kill a Mockingbird' to depict that story holds meaning beyond the character portrait.
Genre Scholars characterized the genre of To kill a Mockingbird as both a Southern Gothic and a Bildungsroman.
Paranormal qualities of Boo Radley, depiction of his house, and Tom Robinson's case of rape involving the elements of
racial injustice provide a gothic aura to the novel. Moreover, in the book, Lee uses the term gothic to delineate the
architecture of Maycomb's courthouse. And hierarchy in the town is also an example because outsiders are also an
element of the Gothic text. A Bildungsroman is a literary term describing a formative novel about a protagonist’s mental
and ethical boom from childhood into adulthood. This literary genre was born in Germany. In German, Bildung means
education and roman means novel. So, it can be interpreted as a novel of education or a story of formation. To kill a
mockingbird is also an example of a feminist bildungsroman because in this Scout learns from her childhood experiences
and gets a clear sense of her place in her community. Jem and Scout, who were children coming of age, faced harsh
realities and learned from them. The novel illustrates the realities Scout faces as an atypical girl on the verge of
womanhood. It is also an exploration of the changes Jem face. Lee seems to examine how the experience in a
community leads them to struggle with understanding the separations of race and class in society. And how all these
experiences help them grow as human beings are the principal purpose of bildungsroman. Title The title "To Kill a
Mockingbird" alludes to one of the novel's central themes: humanitarianism. It is the responsibility of society to protect
those who sing for you and cause no harm. It symbolizes human decency, justice in the face of cruelty, selflessness, and
kindness, all of which should be preserved in this world. Through the four words of the title, Harper Lee instills a brilliant
message to the general reader: protect a society's mockingbirds at all costs. Tom Robinson is an obvious mockingbird,
having been wrongfully convicted of rape solely due to racial discrimination, despite being a harmless bystander. When
he lends a helping hand to a socially excluded 'white trash,' Mayella Ewell when he discovers her in a lonely and
overworked state. When her father notices her advances, she accuses Tom of rape in court. In this scene, Atticus plays
an important role in saving a mockingbird. Atticus recognizes Tom as a mockingbird and goes to great lengths to protect
him, including guarding the jailhouse against the lynch mob. Regardless of the fact that he was unable to save Tom in
the end, Atticus remains true to his own words and could at the very least present Tom as a true mockingbird, killed
simply for helping. Arthur Radley is also portrayed as a mockingbird who has been deprived of ordinary life because of
societal prejudice, domestic cruelty, and pride. In his adolescence, Arthur's participation in a harmless prank enraged his
father, a Redneck American, who sentenced him to life in solitary confinement, leading the community to label him a
malevolent phantom.' Jem can also be a mockingbird because of his actions at the end of the novel when he tries to fight
off Bob when Bob catches hold of Scout. Jem suffers as a result of his efforts to protect his younger sister. In this
episode, however, the mockingbird is both saved and killed as well. Because the children are directly exposed to the
pinnacle of cruelty in a prejudiced society, destroying their innocence. Thus, the mockingbird's physical form is
conserved, but its inner innocence is lost. Content Summary and Analysis To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the fictional town
of Maycomb, Alabama, during the Great Depression. Jean Louise ("Scout") Finch is the novel's protagonist, an intelligent
but unconventional young girl who grows from six to nine years old. Her widowed father, Atticus Finch, raises her and
her brother, Jeremy Atticus ("Jem"). He is a well-known lawyer who encourages his children to be compassionate and
just. He especially tells them that it is "a sin to kill a mockingbird," alluding to the fact that the birds are innocent and
harmless. When one of the town's Black residents, Tom Robinson, is falsely accused of raping a white woman, Mayella
Ewell, Atticus agrees to defend him despite threats from the community. At one point, a mob confronts him with the
intent of lynching his client, but he refuses to abandon him. Scout unintentionally defuses the situation. Despite Atticus's
defense, which suggests a more plausible interpretation of the evidence—that Mayella's father Bob Ewell attacked her,
Tom was convicted, and later he was killed while attempting to flee custody. A character compares his death to "the
senseless slaughter of songbirds," similar to Atticus' remark about the mockingbird. Meanwhile, the children act out their
miniaturized drama of prejudice and superstition as they become interested in Arthur ("Boo") Radley, a reclusive
neighbor, and local legend. They have their ideas about him and are unable to resist the allure of trespassing on
Radley's property. Their fantasies thrive on the dehumanization instilled in them by their elders. Atticus, on the other
hand, chastises them and attempts to persuade them to be more sensitive. Boo's presence is felt indirectly through a
series of benevolent acts, culminating in his intervention when Bob Ewell attacks Jem and Scout. Boo murders Ewell, but
Heck Tate, the sheriff, believes it is better to say that Ewell died when he flies. To Kill a Mockingbird is both a coming-of-
age story for a young girl and a darker drama about the origins and consequences of racism and prejudice, probing how
good and evil can coexist within a single community or individual. Scouts' moral education is twofold: resisting
unfounded negativity toward others but persevering when these values are inevitably, and sometimes violently,
subverted. Criticism of the novel's sermonising tendency has been met with praise for its insight and stylistic
effectiveness. Lee's father, Amasa Coleman Lee, a compassionate and dedicated lawyer and newspaper editor is said to
have inspired the character of Atticus Finch. To Kill a Mockingbird's plot was inspired in part by his unsuccessful young
defense of two African American men convicted of murder in 1919, his only criminal case. Following the phenomenal
success of To Kill a Mockingbird and the lack of subsequent novels by Lee, some speculated that Capote was the actual
author of Lee's work, a rumor that was put to rest in 2006 when a 1959 letter from Capote to his aunt was discovered,
stating that he had read and liked the draft of To Kill a Mockingbird that Lee had shown him but making no mention of
any role in writing it. The novel sparked several adaptations, the most famous of which was the classic 1962 film starring
Gregory Peck as Atticus. His Academy Award-winning performance has become an indelible part of film history. (As Boo
Radley, Robert Duvall made his film debut.) The novel was adapted into a Broadway play by Aaron Sorkin, which
premiered in 2018. (The estate of Lee sued Sorkin over his adaptation, in which Atticus rather than Scout was the main
character, but the dispute was settled before the play opened.) Characters Jean Louise Finch Jean Louise Finch, or Scout
as she is affectionately known, is Atticus Finch's daughter. The novel begins when she is nearly six years old and
concludes when she is nine years old. Scout whereas narrates the story as an adult looking back on her childhood and
the events that occurred through her childhood eyes. Scout is less mature than her older brother Jem at the start of the
novel because she is several years younger than him, and there are events in Tom Robinson's trial that she does not
fully comprehend at first. As the novel progresses, Scout gradually gains a better understanding of the issues. And the
lessons Atticus is attempting to teach her. She also tries to keep her calm and become less irritable. When describing
Bob Ewell's attack on Jem, she says, "When enough years had passed for us to look back on them, we sometimes
discussed the events leading up to his accident." Scout has matured, as evidenced by her ability to discuss events with
Jem rather than argue about them. Jem Finch Scout's older brother, Jem, is ten years old when the novel begins. He
matures faster than Scout because he is older, and he sometimes understands issues that she does not. Although he is
willing to be seen playing with his younger sister at the beginning of the novel, as the story progresses, he becomes
moody and wishes to spend time alone. Jem is not as hot-tempered as Scout, but there is one scene in the book where
he loses control of his emotions. When Mrs. Dubose, the Finch family's next-door neighbor, taunts him about Atticus
defending Tom Robinson, he snaps and, armed with Scout's new twirling baton, chops off the heads of Mrs. Debose's
beloved camellias. Atticus Finch Scout and Jem's father is Atticus Finch, a lawyer. His wife died when Scout and Jem were
young, so he is a single father. He takes his parental responsibilities very seriously and encourages Scout and Jem to be
tolerant and fair-minded. And Atticus motivates his children to also analyze situations from the perspective of others.
Atticus can also be seen as Harper Lee's mouthpiece because the views he expresses about the injustice of racism and
the negativity surrounding intolerance are those she held. When the novel begins, he is nearly 50 years old, and Scout
and Jem are embarrassed that their father is grey-haired than many other parents they know. He appears frail to them
because he does not play football or have a job that requires physical, manual labor. However, by the end of the novel,
Scout and Jem have realized that their father's bravery stems from his ability to stand up for what he believes in, even
when the majority around him disagree. Atticus acts the same way at home as he does in the town of Maycomb or at
work. Throughout the novel, he remains courteous, even when confronted with negative behaviour, and treats everyone
with respect. This is in contrast to many Maycomb residents, who are rude and dismissive of black people. Boo Radley
The Finch family's neighbor is Boo Radley. He began to associate with a gang of boys when he was young, and they
gradually became a nuisance in Maycomb, drinking whiskey and attending dances at a gambling den. The boys
appeared in court after crashing a "flivver" one night. The other boys were sent to an industrial school, but Boo's father,
Mr. Radley, thought it would be too embarrassing for his son to attend such a school and asked if he could look after his
son instead. The judge agreed, but this meant that Boo would spend the next 15 years of his life locked up in his
childhood home. He transforms into a ghost, unable to live an ordinary fulfilling life, and appears to rebel only when he
stabs his father in the leg with a pair of scissors. Boo is imprisoned in the courthouse basement for a time after this
incident but is later released. When Mr. Radley dies, people in Maycomb believe Boo will be allowed to leave, but when
his brother Nathan Radley returns home, Boo's imprisonment continues. Boo becomes enthralled by Scout, Jem, and
Dill's antics in the street outside his house. He rewards them by leaving gifts in the tree hole outside his garden. And he
also saves them when they are attacked by Bob Ewell. As Jem grows older, he realizes that one of the reasons Boo
Radley may no longer leave his house is because he no longer wants to. His home provides him with security that the
outside world does not. They both realize by the end of the novel that Boo is not the man they imagined. Miss Maudie
Atkinson Miss Maudie, like Atticus, is the voice of reason in Maycomb. Unlike many of her neighbors, she is not quick to
pass judgment on others, does not gossip about Boo Radley, and hopes that even if Tom Robinson is inevitably found
guilty, Atticus' words at the trial will affect some small future change. She is kind to Scout and Jem and can be counted
on to give them sound advice when Atticus isn't around.

Report Title: Book Review by Sumyya

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Introduction You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view until you climb into his
skin and walk around it.
" (Lee 33) A lawyers advice to her daughter as he convinces her to go to the
school the next day when she is disappointed with her teacher's orders asking her not to read
at home.
A novel narrated through the young eyes of Scout Finch explains how the conscience of a town enduated in prejudice,
violence, and
hypocrisy is pricked by a man when he tries to stand for a black man charged with the rape of a white girl.
Harper Lee explains in a zestful way the attitudes of adults to race and class in the Deep South of 1930.
Background To kill a Mockingbird is a Southern Gothic novel and Bildungsroman, written by the America-based author
Harper Lee.
Published in 1960, it has become a classic of modern American literature.
It is not an autobiography, but the plot and characters are loosely based on the
author's experiences of her childhood and events near her hometown Monroeville, Alabama, in her early teen.
The book is a top-notch example of how the author brings warmth and humor despite dealing with the grave issues of
rape and racial inequality. The historian Joseph Crespino said, "In the twentieth century, To Kill a Mockingbird is
probably the most widely read (0)
The book is a top-notch example of how the author brings warmth and humor despite dealing with the grave issues of
rape and racial inequality. book dealing with race in America, and its main character, Atticus Finch, the most enduring
fictional image of racial heroism. (1)
" (Crespino 9-30) Despite its themes, To Kill a Mockingbird has been often challenged for its use of racial epithets.
In 2006, it was ranked ahead of Bible as one book "every adult should read before they die.
" (Pauli) Author Mary McDonough Murphy calls the book "an astonishing phenomenon" after
collecting individual impressions of To Kill a Mockingbird by several authors and public
figures.
(Zipp) About the Author Harper Lee was born in 1926 to Amasa Coleman Lee
and Frances Cunningham Finch in the Southern town of Monroeville, Alabama, where she spent her early childhood. (2)
She attended local schools for primary education.
Subsequently, Lee went to Montgomery to attend Huntingdon College and wrote stories on racial injustice for campus
literary magazines: Huntress.
She continued writing on racial injustice, even after going to Alabama University.
In 1950, when Lee moved to New York to work as a reservation clerk at British Overseas Airways Corporation, she began
writing about the people of Monroeville.
But soon, she got financial aid from her friends and started as a full-time writer.
With the help of an editor, Therese von Hohoff Torrey, she transformed a series of anecdotes into To Kill a Mockingbird.
After the publishers rejected the title, Lee suggested 'To kill a Mockingbird' to depict that story holds
meaning beyond the character portrait.
Genre Scholars characterized the genre of To kill a Mockingbird as both a Southern Gothic and a Bildungsroman.
Paranormal qualities of Boo Radley, depiction of his house, and Tom Robinson's case
of rape involving the elements of racial injustice provide a gothic aura to the
novel.
Moreover, in the book, Lee uses the term gothic to delineate the architecture of Maycomb's courthouse.
And hierarchy in the town is also an example because outsiders are also an element of the Gothic text.
A Bildungsroman is a literary term describing a formative novel about a protagonist’s mental and ethical boom from
childhood into adulthood.
This literary genre was born in Germany. In German, Bildung means education and roman means novel. (3)
So, it can be interpreted as a novel of education or a story of formation.
To kill a mockingbird is also an example of a feminist bildungsroman because in this
Scout learns from her childhood experiences and gets a clear sense of her place in her
community. Jem and Scout, who were children coming of age, faced harsh realities and learned from them. (4)
The novel illustrates the realities Scout faces as an atypical girl on the verge of womanhood.
It is also an exploration of the changes Jem face.
Lee seems to examine how the experience in a community leads them to struggle with understanding the separations of
race and class in society.
And how all these experiences help them grow as human beings are the principal purpose of bildungsroman.
Title The title To Kill a Mockingbird" alludes to one of the novels central themes: humanitarianism.
It is the responsibility of society to protect those who sing for you and cause no harm.
It symbolizes human decency, justice in the face of cruelty, selflessness, and kindness, all of which should be preserved
in this world.
Through the four words of the title, Harper Lee instills a brilliant message to the general reader: protect a
society's mockingbirds at all costs.
Tom Robinson is an obvious mockingbird, having been wrongfully convicted of rape solely due to racial discrimination,
despite being a harmless bystander.
When he lends a helping hand to a socially excluded 'white trash,' Mayella Ewell when he discovers her in
a lonely and overworked state.
When her father notices her advances, she accuses Tom of rape in court.
In this scene, Atticus plays an important role in saving a mockingbird.
Atticus recognizes Tom as a mockingbird and goes to great lengths to protect him, including guarding the jailhouse
against the lynch mob.
Regardless of the fact that he was unable to save Tom in the end, Atticus remains true to
his own words and could at the very least present Tom as a true mockingbird, killed simply for helping.
Arthur Radley is also portrayed as a mockingbird who has been deprived of ordinary life because of societal prejudice,
domestic cruelty, and pride.
In his adolescence, Arthur's participation in a harmless prank enraged his father, a Redneck American,
who sentenced him to life in solitary confinement, leading the community to label him a malevolent
phantom.
' Jem can also be a mockingbird because of his actions at the end of the novel when he tries to fight off Bob when
Bob catches hold of Scout.
Jem suffers as a result of his efforts to protect his younger sister.
In this episode, however, the mockingbird is both saved and killed as well.
Because the children are directly exposed to the pinnacle of cruelty in a prejudiced society, destroying their innocence.
Thus, the mockingbirds physical form is conserved, but its inner innocence is lost.
Content Summary and Analysis To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama, during the Great
Depression. Jean Louise (Scout") Finch is the novel's protagonist, an intelligent but unconventional young
girl who grows from six to nine years old. (5)
Her widowed father, Atticus Finch, raises her and her brother, Jeremy Atticus ("Jem").
He is a well-known lawyer who encourages his children to be compassionate and just. He especially tells them that it is
"a sin to kill a mockingbird," alluding to the fact that the birds are innocent and harmless. (6)
When one of the town's Black residents, Tom Robinson, is falsely accused of raping a white woman, Mayella
Ewell, Atticus agrees to defend him despite threats from the community. (7)
When one of the town's Black residents, Tom Robinson, is falsely accused of raping At one point, a mob confronts
him with the intent of lynching his client, but he refuses to abandon him. (8)
Scout unintentionally defuses the situation. Despite Atticus's defense, which suggests a more plausible
interpretation of the evidence—that Mayella's father Bob (9)
Ewell attacked her, Tom was convicted, and later he was killed while attempting to flee custody. A character compares
his death to "the senseless slaughter of songbirds," similar to Atticus' remark about the mockingbird.
(10)
Meanwhile, the children act out their miniaturized drama of prejudice and superstition
as they become interested in Arthur ("Boo") Radley, a reclusive neighbor, and local legend. (11)
They have their ideas about him and are unable to resist the allure of trespassing on Radley's property. Their
fantasies thrive on the dehumanization instilled in them by their elders. (12)
Atticus, on the other hand, chastises them and attempts to persuade them to be more sensitive.
Boo's presence is felt indirectly through a series of benevolent acts, culminating in his intervention when Bob
Ewell attacks Jem and Scout.
Boo murders Ewell, but Heck Tate, the sheriff, believes it is better to say that Ewell died when he flies.
To Kill a Mockingbird is both a coming-of-age story for a young girl and a darker drama about the origins and
consequences of racism and prejudice, probing how good and evil can coexist within a single community or individual.
(13)
Scouts' moral education is twofold: resisting unfounded negativity toward others but persevering when these
values are inevitably, and sometimes violently, subverted.
Criticism of the novels sermonising tendency has been met with praise for its insight and stylistic effectiveness.
Lee's father, Amasa Coleman Lee, a compassionate and dedicated lawyer and newspaper editor is said to have
inspired the character of Atticus Finch.
To Kill a Mockingbird's plot was inspired in part by his unsuccessful young defense of two African American men
convicted of murder in 1919, his only criminal case.
Following the phenomenal success of To Kill a Mockingbird and the lack of subsequent novels by Lee, some speculated
that Capote was the actual
author of Lee's work, a rumor that was put to rest in 2006 when a 1959 letter from Capote to his aunt was
discovered, stating that he had read and liked the draft of To Kill a Mockingbird that Lee had shown him but making no
mention of any role (14)
author of Lee's work, a rumor that was put to rest in 2006 when a 1959 letter from Capote to his aunt was
discovered, stating in writing it. (15)
The novel sparked several adaptations, the most famous of which was the classic 1962 film starring Gregory Peck as
Atticus.
His Academy Award-winning performance has become an indelible part of film history. (As Boo Radley, Robert Duvall
made his film debut. (16)
) The novel was adapted into a Broadway play by Aaron Sorkin, which premiered in 2018. (The estate of Lee sued Sorkin
over his adaptation, in which Atticus rather than Scout was the main character, but the dispute was settled before the
play opened. (17)
) Characters Jean Louise Finch Jean Louise Finch, or Scout as she is affectionately known, is Atticus Finch's
daughter.
The novel begins when she is nearly six years old and concludes when she is nine years old.
Scout whereas narrates the story as an adult looking back on her childhood and the events that occurred through her
childhood eyes.
Scout is less mature than her older brother Jem at the start of the novel because she is several
years younger than him, and there are events in Tom Robinson's trial that she does not fully comprehend at first.
As the novel progresses, Scout gradually gains a better understanding of the issues.
And the lessons Atticus is attempting to teach her.
She also tries to keep her calm and become less irritable.
When describing Bob Ewell's attack on Jem, she says, When enough years had passed for
us to look back on them, we sometimes discussed the events leading up to his accident. " Scout has matured, as
evidenced by her ability to discuss events with Jem rather than argue about them. (18)
Jem Finch Scout's older brother, Jem, is ten years old when the novel begins.
He matures faster than Scout because he is older, and he sometimes understands issues that she does not.
Although he is willing to be seen playing with his younger sister at the beginning of the novel, as the story progresses,
he becomes moody and wishes to spend time alone. (19)
Jem is not as hot-tempered as Scout, but there is one scene in the book where he loses control of his emotions. When
Mrs.
Dubose, the Finch family's next-door neighbor, taunts him about Atticus defending Tom Robinson,
he snaps and, armed with Scout's new twirling baton, chops off the heads of Mrs. (20)
he snaps and, armed with Scout's new twirling baton, chops off the heads of Debose's beloved camellias.
(21)
he snaps and, armed with Scout's new twirling baton, chops off the heads of Atticus Finch Scout and Jem's
father is Atticus Finch, a lawyer. (22)
His wife died when Scout and Jem were young, so he is a single father.
He takes his parental responsibilities very seriously and encourages Scout and Jem to be tolerant and fair-minded.
And Atticus motivates his children to also analyze situations from the perspective of others. Atticus can also be seen as
Harper Lees mouthpiece because the views he (23)
expresses about the injustice of racism and the negativity surrounding intolerance are those she held. (24)
When the novel begins, he is nearly 50 years old, and Scout and Jem are embarrassed that their father is grey-haired
than many other parents they know.
He appears frail to them because he does not play football or have a job that requires physical, manual labor.
However, by the end of the novel, Scout and Jem have realized that their father's bravery stems
from his ability to stand up for what he believes in, even when the majority around him disagree.
Atticus acts the same way at home as he does in the town of Maycomb or at work.
Throughout the novel, he remains courteous, even when confronted with negative behaviour, and treats everyone with
respect.
This is in contrast to many Maycomb residents, who are rude and dismissive of black people.
Boo Radley The Finch family's neighbor is Boo Radley.
He began to associate with a gang of boys when he was young, and they gradually became a nuisance in Maycomb,
drinking whiskey and attending dances at a gambling den.
The boys appeared in court after crashing a flivver" one night.
The other boys were sent to an industrial school, but Boo's father, Mr.
Radley, thought it would be too embarrassing for his son to attend such a school and asked if he could look after his son
instead.
The judge agreed, but this meant that Boo would spend the next 15 years of his life locked up in his childhood home.
He transforms into a ghost, unable to live an ordinary fulfilling life, and appears to rebel only when he stabs his father in
the leg with a pair of scissors.
Boo is imprisoned in the courthouse basement for a time after this incident but is later released. When Mr.
Radley dies, people in Maycomb believe Boo will be allowed to leave, but when his brother Nathan Radley returns home,
Boo's imprisonment continues.
Boo becomes enthralled by Scout, Jem, and Dill's antics in the street outside his house.
He rewards them by leaving gifts in the tree hole outside his garden.
And he also saves them when they are attacked by Bob Ewell.
As Jem grows older, he realizes that one of the reasons Boo Radley may no longer leave his house is because he no
longer wants to.
His home provides him with security that the outside world does not.
They both realize by the end of the novel that Boo is not the man they imagined.
Miss Maudie Atkinson Miss Maudie, like Atticus, is the voice of reason in Maycomb.
Unlike many of her neighbors, she is not quick to pass judgment on others, does not gossip about Boo Radley,
and hopes that even if Tom Robinson is inevitably found guilty, Atticus words at the trial will affect some small future
change. (25)
She is kind to Scout and Jem and can be counted on to give them sound advice when Atticus isn't around.

Match Urls:
0: http://www.mockingbird.ua.edu/book.html
1: https://blackwiki.org/index.php?title=To_Kill_a_Mockingbird
2: https://www.unicef.org/early-childhood-development
3: https://en.linkfang.org/wiki/History_of_manga
4: https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/what-three-important-life-lessons-do-scout-and-344038
5: https://neeness.com/who-is-jean-louise-finch-in-to-kill-a-mockingbird-2/
6: https://goodpdfs.com/to-kill-a-mockingbird-pdf-6082df5431c4634
7: https://www.frankslide.com/whats-how-do-you-kill-a-mockingbird-about/
8: https://sites.google.com/site/philosophygreekancient/the-presocratics---an-overview
9: https://acpsf.org/exam/kill-mockingbird-summary-questions-and-answers
10: https://www.britannica.com/topic/To-Kill-a-Mockingbird
11: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/legend
12: https://arts-of-seduction.blogspot.com/#!
13: https://www.britannica.com/topic/To-Kill-a-Mockingbird/Analysis-adaptations-and-Go-Set-a-Watchman
14: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Harper-Lee
15: https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostrophe
16: https://www.answers.com/Q/Was_Robert_Duvall_in_To_Kill_a_Mockingbird
17: https://www.npr.org/2019/03/01/699245024/community-theaters-kill-mockingbird-productions-after-lawsuit-threat
18: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zxytfrd/revision/2
19: https://www.thoughtco.com/frankenstein-summary-4580213
20: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Mrs.
21: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/zxytfrd/revision/3
22: https://tokillamockingbirdquotes.org/to-kill-a-mockingbird-characters
23: https://www.coursehero.com/file/68737652/How-Atticus-Character-Reveals-Harper-Lees-Ideas-About-Social-Justice/
24: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/held
25: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/change
Keywords Density

One Word 2 Words 3 Words

scout 2.16% kill mockingbird 1.25% kill mockingbird southern 0.17%

mockingbird 2.08% scout jem 0.67% amasa coleman lee 0.17%

atticus 2% boo radley 0.58% character atticus finch 0.17%

kill 1.5% tom robinson 0.5% father atticus finch 0.17%

finch 1.16% atticus finch 0.5% performance indelible part 0.08%

Plagiarism Report
By check-plagiarism.com

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