To Kill A Mockingbird- by Harper Lee
I've blogged about this book before, many times, but my freshmen have just finished it, and so I wanted to blog about it again.
I cannot say how much I love this book. The narrator, a little girl nick-named Scout, learns much throughout the book about right and wrong, and how to be an honorable human being. While she connects with many people throughout the book, her biggest influence is her father, Atticus. He's a single parent, their mom having died when Scout was too little to remember. Calpurnia and Aunt Alexandria are there to help out, but Atticus has the bigger share of teaching Scout and her brother Jem about life and how to treat others. The title To Kill A Mockingbird was very appropriate, I think, because according to Atticus, mockingbirds don't do anything to hurt people, they just sing for people. There are many "mockingbirds" in this book, good people who haven't done anything wrong, and only want to help others. Tom Robinson is the first one who comes to mind, a decent man who is blamed for something he didn't do, just because he had the "unmitigated temerity to feel sorry for a white woman." Atticus himself is also a mockingbird, working hard to serve his family and his community, and getting little back aside from criticism and ridicule. Arthur Radley is another I can think of, a good man, who after one minor mistake as a young person, is never let out into society again by his overly controlling family.
For myself, my favor for a book is determined by how well it helps people to become better, kinder, more tolerant, etc.
To Kill A Mockingbird is one of the books that does those things for me. I'm glad Harper Lee wrote it.
I cannot say how much I love this book. The narrator, a little girl nick-named Scout, learns much throughout the book about right and wrong, and how to be an honorable human being. While she connects with many people throughout the book, her biggest influence is her father, Atticus. He's a single parent, their mom having died when Scout was too little to remember. Calpurnia and Aunt Alexandria are there to help out, but Atticus has the bigger share of teaching Scout and her brother Jem about life and how to treat others. The title To Kill A Mockingbird was very appropriate, I think, because according to Atticus, mockingbirds don't do anything to hurt people, they just sing for people. There are many "mockingbirds" in this book, good people who haven't done anything wrong, and only want to help others. Tom Robinson is the first one who comes to mind, a decent man who is blamed for something he didn't do, just because he had the "unmitigated temerity to feel sorry for a white woman." Atticus himself is also a mockingbird, working hard to serve his family and his community, and getting little back aside from criticism and ridicule. Arthur Radley is another I can think of, a good man, who after one minor mistake as a young person, is never let out into society again by his overly controlling family.
For myself, my favor for a book is determined by how well it helps people to become better, kinder, more tolerant, etc.
To Kill A Mockingbird is one of the books that does those things for me. I'm glad Harper Lee wrote it.
Published on May 04, 2015 13:58
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Loralee Evans
Hello, I am the author of The King's Heir, and The Birthright, both published by Cedar Fort. They are based on stories from the Book of Mormon, and both have similar characters in them, though either
Hello, I am the author of The King's Heir, and The Birthright, both published by Cedar Fort. They are based on stories from the Book of Mormon, and both have similar characters in them, though either one could stand alone as its own book. The King's Heir, while written after The Birthright, happens first chronologically, and takes place during the time of Alma the Younger. In fact, the story opens just a few days before his conversion. It follows the lives of Rebekah and Sarah, cousins and best friends, and the struggles they go through to find true love. The Birthright takes place during the war near to the end of the book of Alma when Amalickiah and his brother Ammoron are wreaking havoc, and Captain Moroni and his comrades have to stop them. It follows Miriam, a young lady who has both Nephite and Lamanite blood in her, who has to find her way in the world, and discover her own hidden strength.
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