PDA

View Full Version : To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee


Kell
22nd February 2008, 21:18
There are several copies of
To Kill a Mocking Bird (http://www.greenmetropolis.com/search.asp?book_title=to+kill+a+mockingbird&author_name=lee&author_first_name=harper&ISBN=&categories=&Format=All&scope=InStock&Results=1&search.x=46&search.y=2&search=search) by Harper Lee (http://www.greenmetropolis.com/search.asp?book_title=to+kill+a+mockingbird&author_name=lee&author_first_name=harper&ISBN=&categories=&Format=All&scope=InStock&Results=1&search.x=46&search.y=2&search=search)
available very cheaply at Green Metropolis if anyone is inerested.

The Reading Circle choice for March is To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee:
A Pulitzer Prize winning novel set in the Deep South in the 1930s, in which a lawyer finds himself defending an innocent black man accused of raping a white girl. "Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit 'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a mockingbird". This is a lawyer's advice to his children as he defends the real mockingbird of this story - a black man charged with raping a white girl in the Deep South of the 1930s.

Some questions to consider:
1- Who was your favourite character and why?
2- Was there a particular part you enjoyed/disliked more than the rest?
3- Was this the first book you've read in this genre/by this author, has it encouraged you to read more?
4- Were there any parts/ideas you struggled with?
5- Overall, was reading the book an enjoyable experience?

(You do not have to answer all, or indeed, any, of these questions, they are meant only as points for you to perhaps mull over as you read, and provoke more discussion. Please feel free to ask and answer any questions that come up as you read.)


Some additional questions taken from www.readinggroupguides.com: (http://www.readinggroupguides.com:)
(DO NOT READ THESE QUESTIONS TILL YOU HAVE READ THE BOOK, AS THERE MAY BE SPOILERS INVOLVED)
1. How do Scout, Jem, and Dill characterize Boo Radley at the beginning of the book? In what way did Boo's past history of violence foreshadow his method of protecting Jem and Scout from Bob Ewell? Does this repetition of aggression make him more or less of a sympathetic character?

2. In Scout's account of her childhood, her father Atticus reigns supreme. How would you characterize his abilities as a single parent? How would you describe his treatment of Calpurnia and Tom Robinson vis a vis his treatment of his white neighbors and colleagues? How would you typify his views on race and class in the larger context of his community and his peers?

3. The title of Lee's book is alluded to when Atticus gives his children air rifles and tells them that they can shoot all the bluejays they want, but "it's a sin to kill a mockingbird." At the end of the novel, Scout likens the "sin" of naming Boo as Bob Ewell's killer to "shootin' a mockingbird." Do you think that Boo is the only innocent, or mockingbird, in this novel?

4. Scout ages two years-from six to eight-over the course of Lee's novel, which is narrated from her perspective as an adult. Did you find the account her narrator provides believable? Were there incidents or observations in the book that seemed unusually "knowing" for such a young child? What event or episode in Scout's story do you feel truly captures her personality?

5. To Kill a Mockingbird has been challenged repeatedly by the political left and right, who have sought to remove it from libraries for its portrayal of conflict between children and adults; ungrammatical speech; references to sex, the supernatural, and witchcraft; and unfavorable presentation of blacks. Which elements of the book-if any-do you think touch on controversial issues in our contemporary culture? Did you find any of those elements especially troubling, persuasive, or insightful?

6. Jem describes to Scout the four "folks" or classes of people in Maycomb County: "…our kind of folks don't like the Cunninghams, the Cunninghams don't like the Ewells, and the Ewells hate and despise the colored folks." What do you think of the ways in which Lee explores race and class in 1930s Alabama? What significance, if any, do you think these characterizations have for people living in other parts of the world?

7. One of the chief criticisms of To Kill a Mockingbird is that the two central storylines -- Scout, Jem, and Dill's fascination with Boo Radley and the trial between Mayella Ewell and Tom Robinson -- are not sufficiently connected in the novel. Do you think that Lee is successful in incorporating these different stories? Were you surprised at the way in which these story lines were resolved? Why or why not?

8. By the end of To Kill a Mockingbird, the book's first sentence: "When he was thirteen, my brother Jem got his arm badly broken at the elbow," has been explained and resolved. What did you think of the events that followed the Halloween pageant? Did you think that Bob Ewell was capable of injuring Scout or Jem? How did you feel about Boo Radley's last-minute intervention?

9. What elements of this book did you find especially memorable, humorous, or inspiring? Are there individual characters whose beliefs, acts, or motives especially impressed or surprised you? Did any events in this book cause you to reconsider your childhood memories or experiences in a new light?

Freewheeling Andy
3rd March 2008, 07:45
I haven't read this since my O-levels (and the very fact they were O-levels and not GCSEs tells you how long that was), but I quite often wonder if this is one of the books that had the strongest influences on the way I think. I almost don't want to ever go back to it because I have an idealised picture of the way it pushes the case for the disenfranchised and outsiders and contrarians against the popular and populist mob.

It's also probably the only book I ever read as a school book that I still cared about despite spending time studying it. I always found that forced study killed books. To Kill A Mocking Bird was powerful enough and well enough written to push through that with its brightness still intact.

Janet
3rd March 2008, 15:17
I read this last year. The following were my comments on it.

This is a book I’ve wanted to read for a long time, but never quite got round to. I’m glad I finally did - I really enjoyed it. I guess it was probably quite shocking when it first came out, and it seems to have been banned in various US states quite often - and quite recently too, which surprised me!

It was beautifully written and is a very visual novel. I think it’s quite popular for GCSE these days, as it was for GCE back in the day, and I can see why.

8/10

scottishbookworm
7th March 2008, 02:32
I've never read it yet but did you know that Harper Lee was childhood friend of Truman Capote! All true!

I'm a fan of Capote's work and Harper Lee's mentioned in the movie Capote and infamous.

NiceguyEddie
7th March 2008, 07:41
3- Was this the first book you've read in this genre/by this author, has it encouraged you to read more?





It's her only work to date & it p'd off Truman Capote as it was so good. Dill is generally thought to be modeled on Capote who was a childhood friend of Harper Lee's.

Altogether a work of genius. It's standard GCSE text now. I recently listened to Sissy Spacek's reading of it. Simply amazing.

People may or may not know that Harper Lee was with Capote when he did the research for In Cold Blood. Another work of genius in my opinion. And I believe the creation of a genre.

NiceguyEddie
7th March 2008, 07:43
It's her only work to date & it p'd off Truman Capote as it was so good. Dill is generally thought to be modeled on Capote who was a childhood friend of Harper Lee's.


Whoops, just Scottish bookworm's post. Sorry.

Kell
7th March 2008, 09:09
It's her only work to date...
LOL! That'll teach me to post the generic questions straight over! Although, it does say genre/author, so I'm using that as my get-out claus. ;)

tilly_felds
7th March 2008, 20:01
For anyone looking for an inexpensive copy, M&S are selling To Kill a Mockingbird for £5!!!! hth someone!
tilly
xx

March
10th March 2008, 16:25
To Kill A Mockingbird was one of the books I did for English Literature GCE 'O' Levels when I was 16. With a fantastic teacher guiding the class, I "learned" more about the world out there through this book. It touches about human compassion, the good and the ugly facets of human behaviour, racism, class segregation, and much more.

I would like to read it again sometime soon.

Pierced Musie
11th March 2008, 18:27
I managed to get the book from the college library and finished reading about 2 days ago. Managed to read about a quarter of the book while in my Study Skills lesson (I got bored after finishing my exams):blush:.

I found it hard to get into the book at first but I got to a certain point where I just got completely engrossed. I loved the way it was written through the eyes of a young girl but my favourite part was that there were 2 plots in the book, even though only 1 is advertised. I loved the whole Boo Radley connection and almost cried when Scout realized who had helped her and Jem!

I also had the pleasure of watching the 1962 movie version. They completely missed the point of the book, taking away the young girls POV and rushing through everything. It's a shame.

I will elaborate by answering some of those questions from the first post tomorrow. But I will say that it was a pleasure to read the book and I am glad it was picked for this month.