50 books to read before you die discussion

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To Kill a Mockingbird
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To Kill a Mockingbird
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Rahul
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May 01, 2016 11:06PM

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I don't know that it's best for any particular age. It does involve the trial of a man accused of rape - certainly an adult subject. And there is some violence, though it's not a continuing theme. Many young people have read and enjoyed this book.


I loved it!"
Personally I felt that making the main narrator a six year old girl (or at least a woman looking back on being a six year old) was genius. It gave the author license to say things that wouldn't have been readily accepted at the time if they'd been voiced by an adult. Also making the main narrator an older woman looking back gave readers the freedom to think of parts of the tale as ideally/imperfectly remembered. Finally observations (particularly about the black church) could be made without any judgement attaching and/or enraging anyone.




Hard to imagine anyone but Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch.

Regena

There is a discussion of Go Set A watchman in this group, from last summer.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I grew up in the South. That informed my comments in the discussion to a degree.

Regena

This is one of my absolute favorite books, it inspires me to be a better person each day. What do you guys think of the way the story tackles prejudice? I personally found it fascinating, due to the way you see it from the clear eyed, non-cynical view of a child, and that it looks at not just people of a different race, but also those "different" or socially outcast to others, like Boo.
Also, is it worth it to read Go Set a Watchman?

You can read our discussion of Go Set a Watchman here https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/... and then perhaps decide for yourself.


I read the book over 30 years ago and I have used the Boo Radley character to refer to some people who have isolated themselves many times. The reference is almost always understood. Memorable characters is one thing that makes me appreciate and remember a book. Boo Radley is one of those memorable characters.


I find it very interesting to hear that Atticus is a fast-growing baby name. I heard so many people say they lost faith in him or came to hate him after Go Set a Watchman, so that gives me hope that more understood the book than did not, after all....
Regena

The Atticus in Go Set A Watchman was a discarded prototype for the Atticus in To Kill A Mockingbird. It is not the same character. One book is not a sequel to the other. I guess some folks just didn't pick up on that.

When she presented the manuscript to the editor, she was asked to rewrite it, and it was published under the title To Kill a Mockingbird.



I think if you read them years apart, that might be true. Read them back to back and you might find there is an interesting conversation that feeds both books, as I did. Seeing the same events in the eyes of Scout as a child and then as an adult was interesting. I ended up loving both of these books. I attended a discussion of Go Set A Watchman where most of the people present hadn't read them together. I found it interesting, Everyone else was calling her Scout during the discussion. I called her by her real name, Jean Louise, used in Go Set A Watchman. For me, that was the best way to stay with the two different points of view in discussing the book. Others just wanted her to still be Scout. It's those two different piints of view that worked so well for me, the child view of Atticus in To Kill A Mockingbird and the adult point of view of Atticus in Go Set A Watchman. They are very different books and it's the dialog between those two points of view that made reading the two books back to back I found so engaging.
I'd wait until you are ready to re-read To Kill a Mockingbird again and read them together.
Hi There,
I read To Kill a Mocking Bird only about a year back,though i think it was on the list at school,i don't recall anything about it.I feel if you just read Mocking Bird and Go Set a Watchman as separate books the two books are worth the reads. However if you try to analyse the two you'll probably agree,the former is the better of the two.
Just enjoy!
I read To Kill a Mocking Bird only about a year back,though i think it was on the list at school,i don't recall anything about it.I feel if you just read Mocking Bird and Go Set a Watchman as separate books the two books are worth the reads. However if you try to analyse the two you'll probably agree,the former is the better of the two.
Just enjoy!


The fact that people are naming babies Atticus may have nothing to do with understanding either book: they just like a name that has been discussed lately. A lot of people do not realize that Romeo & Juliet both died at the end of the play, but they think they are two of the greatest lovers that ever lived (despite that they did not "live" happily ever after).

Well, it may not be exactly a sequel because it was written before Mockingbird. However, it does have many of the same characters and is placed in time afterwards. People cannot help but make the comparisons. What they do have to remember is that Mockingbird is written from the perspective of a 6-year-old who idolizes her father. Watchman, on the other hand, is told by a grownup Scout who has already begun to see adult reality.

You're right, of course. People cannot help but make the comparisons. In actuality though, the Atticus in To Kill a Mockingbird was derived from the Atticus in Go Set A Watchmen. Watchman Atticus is not Mockingbird Atticus years later. The same goes for Scout. Jean Louise in Watchman is not Mockingbird Scout grown up.
Go Set a Watchman is a discarded first novel. To Kill a Mockingbird is a successful novel based on a reinvented history of the reinvented characters created for Go Set a Watchman.



The story goes that when Harper Lee submitted her first novel for publication, her publisher counseled her to rewrite it. Thus, To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960. Go Set a Watchman, supposedly that first novel, was published in July of 2015, some six decades after it was written. Harper Lee died several months later.


The story goes that wh..."
Yes, and the story is told by a grown up Scout and not by her at 6 as in the Mockingbird, and Atticus' character is quite different.
Several readers advise to read Go Set a Watchman after the other as there is a kind of dialogue between the two books due to the difference in the point of view of the narrator.





I guess that English is not your native language. I wonder if you read the book in English or did you read a translation. And I wonder if you have seen the movie To Kill a Mockingbird.
With regard to book discussion, you have done fine.

You are right, i study English. I think you noticed my grammar errors.
I want to discuss this book, despite i was reading it in Russian. Because i am impatient and want to participate in a group's life.)


The mockingbird is a grey and white songbird widespread in America. We see them and hear them everyday. I hear one singing right now. You can see and hear them here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMpe3...
In To Kill a Mockingbird, Atticus tells Scout 'it's a sin to kill a mockingbird.' The mockingbird is a metaphor for innocence. In this thread, we discussed which characters in the book are the mockingbird. See posts 18-21 on the first page of this topic thread.