To Kill a Mockingbird Theatrical Presentation

Harper Lee Procession of Characters Towns people Photobucket Photobucket Scout and Dill Photobucket The Crowd Watches Atticus Finch Scout and Dill Mr. Ewell takes the stand Jem and Scout get in trouble Photobucket Photobucket Harper Lee Tom Robinson is guilty Calpurnia and Scout Cast of Characters Essay Contest Winners To Kill a Mockingbird Players

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Discussing Mockingbird

The Big Read Open Book Discussion generated some interesting insights from participants.  Quincy Public Library Book Club Coordinator, Katie Kraushaar, led a very energetic and lively discussion of To Kill a Mockingbird, at Great Debate Books on Tuesday, October 6 at 1:30pm.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is rightly considered an American classic. Lee writes wonderfully, in the voice of a Southern child. The story is easy to read and the action is entertaining. While all these characteristics would qualify To Kill a Mockingbird as a good read, they do not necessarily indicate a classic.

What moves To Kill a Mockingbird to classic status is its morality and ability to draw sympathy out of readers as much today as when it was written in 1960. To Kill a Mockingbird deals with heavy issues--racism, oppression, injustice. Amazingly, it is able to handle these deep and sensitive areas without feeling depressing or preachy. Lee accomplishes this by making the narrator a child and allowing us to learn along with her.

Lee's writing makes it is easy to enter the world of depression era Alabama. Despite all the flaws of the town, it is also easy to love many things about the place and many of the characters. If you have not yet read To Kill a Mockingbird, you will not regret picking it up. If you read it awhile ago, it may be time to visit this world again.

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