DISCLAIMER: I missed a passion blog post a few weeks ago, so you
guys are getting two for the price of one this week on my passion blog! If you
wanna read both, feel free as they are both great movies and I loved watching
them. Disclaimer over.
I'm not sure why
it's come up so often recently, but I've spent a lot of time lately talking
about good books, books that a lot of people read in high school. I was in a
cafe in Pittsburgh over break reading a book and some guy just struck up a
conversation with me about British literature, so that was pretty cool. My
friend from high school and I talked about some books that we'd read in ninth
grade, as well, one of them being To
Kill a Mockingbird.
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| The young actor and actress playing Jem and Scout do a phenomenal job. (src) |
I'm pretty sure we
all had to read this book at some point in high school, seeing as it's a great
American classic. In case you didn't read it, I'm going to give you a brief
rundown. The book is told from the perspective of Jean Louise Finch, a young
girl living in the slow-moving town of Maycomb, Alabama during the Great
Depression. The story seems to have two separate plot lines at first.
The first
storyline concerns Jean Louise, better known as Scout, and her brother Jem, and
their interactions with a strange, alienated man in their neighborhood. His
name is Boo Radley, and his past is so shrouded in local lore that he's like
the bogeyman to Jem and Scout. However, he begins to leave gifts for them in a
tree near their house, and they begin to see that he's not all that scary.
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| Atticus Finch is a babe to be honest. It helps that he's not a racist p.o.s. (src) |
The second
storyline concerns Atticus, Jem and Scout's father, and his defending of an
innocent black man, Tom Robinson. Being that this is a small southern town in
the Great Depression era, it doesn't really matter that Tom is innocent; if
white people say he did something, then he did it, whether or not it
happened.
The storylines come together after Tom is found guilty of the
crime and killed when he tries to escape. After this, the man who accused Tom
has the nerve to attack Jem and Scout just to piss off Atticus, but they are
saved by Boo Radley.
Anyone who’s read the novel knows that it has a very specific
tone, sentimental and naïve, as it’s told through Scout’s eyes. I was worried
that when I watched the movie, it would fail to capture the essence of the
novel; I was worried that it would forego the main character, Scout, to focus
on the trial, as the movie was released in the thick of the civil rights
movement. But thankfully, the movie stayed true to the novel.
Also thankfully, the movie was greatly enhanced by its score. A
playful melody weaves throughout the movie, the sound of childhood innocence;
this melody is used skillfully throughout the movie when Boo Radley comes up,
suggesting that he’s innocent and safe. It’s one of those classic scores for a
classic movie, extremely well done.
THINGS TO THINK ABOUT:
Do you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them? Did you like this book when you read it? Did you read it in high school? What was your favorite book in high school?


Although always told to never talk to strangers, I love when strangers start a nice conversation. I think you necessaro;y have to stand in a mans shoes and walk around in them for you to know him. I read a ton of classics in high school, but this actually was not one of them, however I still did read it but at times I felt like it was a little slow to read. And i think my favorite book of high school was either catcher in the rye, freakonomics, or Angela's Ashes
ReplyDeleteSorry Irene, but I would have to disagree about The Catcher in the Rye. That book was not my forte. But then again, I am not much of a literary reader. However, I can appreciate the magnificence that is Harper Lee's writing. I also love how the themes of the book sometimes tend to feel contradictory, but through further analysis, you find that they are really all trying to say the same thing.
ReplyDeleteI remember reading To Kill a Mockingbird in high school! I have seen the movie, or at least parts of the movie before. I can't remember if my teacher had my class watch the whole movie or if she had us watch clips of the moive after we were done reading certain chapters of the book. I enjoyed reading this book, but my favorite book in high school was The Blind Assassin.
ReplyDelete