Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird was published fifty years ago, and has never lost momentum as a life changing book through three generations. I just finished reading a compendium of individual reactions to the book to mark this anniversary and found a common theme. Each writer, many of whom are authors themselves, felt that universal appreciation for Lee’s book was largely due to the well drawn characters who inhabit this small Southern town. Everyone wants to be a Scout, or a big brother Jem, or have a father like Atticus. Everyone knows a Boo.
The book has larger themes –of prejudice, teaching tolerance for differences and making a commitment to doing the right thing even at great personal cost. What makes the themes accessible is our connection to Harper Lee’s people.
We readers become Scout, who, with child-like acceptance and trust, looks into the frightened eyes of someone who himself had been feared and misunderstood.
We too can say, “Hey, Boo.”
And mean it.
Great post, Mrs. Gibson. To Kill A Mockingbird remains my favorite book to this day for quite a few reasons. One of the chief ones is definitely the way the environment of Maycomb is captured so expertly by Harper Lee. It’s technically a fictional town, but I would never have guessed. It’s so fleshed-out, so real, I feel like I’m actually walking through the town as Scout describes it. Especially when Atticus shoots the dog.
Speaking of Atticus, what a great character! Stories are all-too-often muddled by characters who are either too perfect or too evil; characters, who remove us from the narrative with their unrealistic natures. Atticus is a family man and a good man. He isn’t leading civil rights marches or trying to break Tom Robinson out of jail; he’s doing the right thing, in the best way he knows how. I love that.