To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5 (681 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
  • Pub. Date: November 1988
  • ISBN-13: 9780446310789
  • Sales Rank: 61
  • 288pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
  • Edition Number: 1
 
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Synopsis

At the age of eight, Scout Finch is an entrenched free-thinker. She can accept her father's warning that it is a sin to kill a mockingbird, because mockingbirds harm no one and give great pleasure. The benefits said to be gained from going to school and keeping her temper elude her.

The place of this enchanting, intensely moving story is Maycomb, Alabama. The time is the Depression, but Scout and her brother, Jem, are seldom depressed. They have appalling gifts for entertaining themselves—appalling, that is, to almost everyone except their wise lawyer father, Atticus.

Atticus is a man of unfaltering good will and humor, and partly because of this, the children become involved in some disturbing adult mysteries: fascinating Boo Radley, who never leaves his house; the terrible temper of Mrs. Dubose down the street; the fine distinctions that make the Finch family "quality"; the forces that cause the people of Maycomb to show compassion in one crisis and unreasoning cruelty in another.

Also because Atticus is what he is, and because he lives where he does, he and his children are plunged into a conflict that indelibly marks their lives—and gives Scout some basis for thinking she knows just about as much about the world as she needs to.

Annotation

Winner of the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for Literature, Fiction.

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Biography

Harper Lee was born in 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama. She attended the local schools and studied law at the University of Alabama. For some years she spent most of her time in New York City, where, until she began writing, she was employed in the reservations department of an international airline. "Aside from writing," says Miss Lee, "my chief interests in life are collecting memoirs of nineteenth-century clergymen, golf, crime and music."

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 681
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 A Memorable Must Read
Kat, another teen reader., 08/13/2008

A definite Must Read for most any age. I'm a highschool student myself, though I read it on my own time because my mom recomended it, despite the fact several of my friends did not enjoy it. It's a real classic though, very well written that not only was it meaningful, but easy to get through. Before you knew it, you could be 100 pages in, only meaning to read 10. Harper Lee did an amazing job of developing not only her characters, but the whole feel of the small southern town, as well as a wonderful message something that's seriously lacking in many modern books, and though sometimes you'll wonder what a scene has to do with the book at all, it all comes together neatly at the end. Told from the eyes of a 8 year old growing up was a brilliant touch, giving a lot more emotion to it. An amazingly written book that everyone should read, To Kill A Mocking Bird will probably be a timeless classic, if it's not already.

Also recommended: Harry Potter, I Have Lived A Thousand Years, In My Hands

Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 Enduring
hawk5391, A reviewer, 08/10/2008

I read this classic for a group discussion for a book group, and I hadn't read it since I was a child. Its theme of racial injustice is not as powerful as it probably was upon its initial publication in 1960, but the overriding theme of the death of innocence endures. The plot, which lacks pacing at times, is not the book's strongest element the real reason the book endures is because of Lee's flowing prose (copied shamelessly and often: see The Secret Life of Bees for example) and strongly drawn characters, most of whom were based on real-life relatives, friends and neighbors.

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