To Kill a Mockingbird
discussion
Am I the only one...


Yes, there is killing in the book. To tell if there is a rape is to give away a large portion of the plot. Regarding "blood and guts," the worst of that is the killing of a rabid dog earl..."
This is the best review for this book according to me. You have almost the same view as I perceive of it. I had to kinda struggle with the starting 5 pages. But once I got over it, it totally amazed me.



Yes, there is killing in the book. To tell if there is a rape is to give away a large portion of the plot. Regarding "blood and guts," the worst of that is the killing of a rabid dog earl..."
I completely agree with this author. It is a lovely book. Give it a chance and I think you will be pleasantly surprised.


I think you need to look at To Kill a Mockingbird in its historical context and also consider that it is not purely a work of fiction. The book was published in 1960, but it is set in a small Southern town in the 1930s. Although not autobiographical, the characters bear more than a passing resemblance to members of Lee's family and residents of the small Alabama town where she grew up. Lee's father (the model for Atticus) was a lawyer and later a newspaper owner. Her brother ("Jem") was 4 years older than her, and Truman Capote ("Dill")regularly stayed next door to Lee with his aunts while his mother went to New York. Lee and Capote were to become life-long friends. Lee has said that some of the elements of the plot are loosely based on characters and incidents from her childhood. She was raised, much as Scout was, with an emphasis on integrity and tolerance.
As for the racial aspect, Lee was writing during a critical phase in the battle over segregation in the South in a state that was the location for many pivotal events -- Rosa Parks' refusal to give up her seat on the bus which led to the Birmingham bus boycott, and the struggle to desegregate the University of Alabama (where Lee had attended law school), to name just two. And before you judge Lee for her use of the "N word", as you call it, you might want to review which characters use which variations. But to write about small-town Southern life in the 1930s without addressing segregation and racial hatred would place the work in the realm of fantasy.
I read To Kill a Mockingbird as a senior in high school, and it rocked my world. I was completely blind to issues of race because my world was almost totally white, with occasional shades of beige. The "minorities" I grew up with were Asians. Did I grow up in the South? Emphatically, no! I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. Segregation (red-lining) was just as real there and then, but you can't see what isn't there.
In many ways To Kill a Mockingbird is about so much more than race. It's about the loss of childhood innocence, courage, integrity, the adult world as seen and understood or misunderstood by the innocent, those who are "different" and how society perceives them. For me, one of the most poignant sub-plots revolves around the children's fascination with "Boo" Radley and his invisible presence in their lives. The final scene, when Scout is looking out at the town from the Radley's porch, looking through "Boo"'s eyes, is, for me, the perfect summation of the book's major theme.
Lee's writing is lyrical, her characters, three-dimensional, and the plot comic, suspenseful, horrifying, and morally powerful by turns. Since first reading it, I have read it many times over -- and seen the movie repeatedly. In my opinion, it is the best book I have EVER read and the movie is the best and truest adaptation of a book. Harper Lee wrote only one book -- this one -- but she is and will remain an American literary icon for this stellar work.
All that said, likes and dislikes are opinions, and everyone is entitled to their own. The fact that this book won the Pulitzer Prize, has been cited by many literary critics and regular readers as the single most influential work of fiction in the 20th century, and has been published in hardback every year since its original publication matters not one whit when it comes to opinions. I'm sorry you didn't enjoy the book, Sydney. It may be one of those books you'll pick up and read again some other time and find it wasn't as bad as you originally thought -- or not. It's happened to me with some books I originally hated.




I'm wth y'all.
No, I did not hate or even dislike it.
The word 'underwhelmed' is spot on.

So let's sugar-coat everything right? Please, stop whining and talking your "race slandering" bs. This is a great book that reaches into people's hearts and minds to give them pause to think about how ignorant the population was about racial problems in those days and how far we have come and how far we still have to go.


My mother was in love with Gregory Peck so she had told me all about the film before I saw that.
By the time I got to the book I was old enough to appreciate it and also independently minded enough to skip the boring bits - I find long descriptions extremely boring.
I have always skipped the boring bits in books and I understand they are important to some people but I don't see why I should let them spoil my enjoyment of an otherwise great story about people I am interested in.
So I can see why some people would find the book underwhelming as we all have different tastes.
If I'd been force-fed the book in class and made to analyze every nuance - it is quite possible I wouldn't like it much either.
As it is I loved it and still reread it - and still skip the boring bits and the nasty bits too.



Why assume that people who say they love and one of their all-time favorites were bigots before they read it, who needed the book (or movie) to motivate them to change? Is it possible that a KKK member read it, felt ashamed of self and decided not to discriminate any more? Doubtful.
More likely the people who love this book have never been bigots, fight discrimination in small ways through out their lives, people who are idealistic and believe in justice.
It could also be some of the people who love the book lived through the Civil Rights era, when Negroes could not swim in a public pool or lake, drink out of a water fountain, be brutally murdered for allegedly whistling at a white woman, and so on.
I can not say the book created the ripple effect that made it possible for a descendant of slaves to be First Lady in the White House, along with a biracial president.









To each their own, I think you're crazy but whatever.




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This book is my favorite book by far. I own a copy of it and never let people borrow it.
I first read it when I was thirteen and was so enthralled I read it nearly straight through. Even at a young age this book really stuck with me. The cruelty and hatred towards African Americans blew me away...I didn't grow up around that, and it really hit me for the first time how awful it used to be for those who were not white. It made me look at myself in a different light for sure. None of my friends liked the book. They thought it was 'boring' or 'stupid'. But to this day I love that book and I am proud to say it is a favorite of mine and I am honored to have it on my bookshelves.
I first read it when I was thirteen and was so enthralled I read it nearly straight through. Even at a young age this book really stuck with me. The cruelty and hatred towards African Americans blew me away...I didn't grow up around that, and it really hit me for the first time how awful it used to be for those who were not white. It made me look at myself in a different light for sure. None of my friends liked the book. They thought it was 'boring' or 'stupid'. But to this day I love that book and I am proud to say it is a favorite of mine and I am honored to have it on my bookshelves.
Julie wrote: "Maybe it's an age thing. I grew up in the south, in a small town, in the early seventies. I can really picture the small town and the attitudes of the time. This book brings tears to my eyes jus..."
I couldn't agree with you more.
I couldn't agree with you more.

I first read Mockingbird when I was about 12/13, and 30 years later I have recently finished it again.. for maybe the 10th or 12th time.. even thought I know every twist and turn, I will never tire of such a brilliant read...

I just checked, and the current population of the United States is ~312 million people, many of whom probably have not even heard of To Kill a Mockingbird, let alone read it. As Alyce (Message 122)said, it isn't likely that a member of KKK is going to throw their sheet in the laundry, let alone the trash, because they read TKAM. In fact, I would expect TKAM to top their list of books to burn/ban.
From reading the comments, it seems those who love TKAM fall into four groups with a lot of overlap: 1) Those who grew up in the South and have some experience with racism, which, BTW, is still alive and well here, although less politically correct than it used to be, 2) Those who grew up with no direct experience of racism, but were catapulted into knowledge by TKAM, 3) Those who were alive and aware of what was going on in the 1960s, and 4) Those who appreciate the delicate beauty and stark honesty of Harper Lee's writing. ALL OF US were affected by reading TKAM; TKAM changed ALL OF OUR LIVES FOREVER, and ALL OF US have tried a little harder to be a tiny bit more like Atticus. But even if one of every four people in the United States has read and loves TKAM (that's 78 million people, so that's a pretty high estimate), we're not going to erase discrimination overnight. There's another 234 million people out there we have to convince!!
I will tell you one thing, though. I would be willing to bet every single one of us who love TKAM stood a bit taller and felt just a little prouder of our country on Tuesday, January 20, 2009, when Barack Obama was sworn in as President of the United States. 146 years after the Emancipation Proclamation went into effect, and in the 200th year of Abraham Lincoln's birth, the son of a black woman stepped into the vision of Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Jr. and so many others. Barack Obama is 1/2 black. Under the old laws of the South, he would not be counted as white unless his only black ancestor was his great-great-great grandfather or grandmother.
We're trying, Kelsey, each in our own small way, to banish discrimination. And we've made some progress. But cultural changes of this magnitude don't happen overnight, or has the age of instant communication lulled you into believing EVERYTHING can happen instantly? Please help up make it happen, Kelsey! Forget how you feel about the book and let your feelings about discrimination inform your actions!

You are mistaken, Barack Obama is the son of a white woman -- it was his father who was black. Unless you're going for some poetic metaphor I'm not picking up on?

I didn't know the author was still alive. Sounds like a one hit wonder to me and an excellent one too.


Oops! Knew I should have Googled before I wrote. Thanks, Mike!

I couldn't agree more, Mary.
And there's no law anywhere that requires you to finish any book, especially after you get out of school. A librarian friend told me that!!


Thanks for the idea.
Shelley, Rain: A Dust Bowl Story
http://dustbowlpoetry.wordpress.com

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