To Kill a Mockingbird

Harper Lee

Pages

336

Year

1960

Difficulty

Easy

Themes

racial injustice, childhood, moral courage, the American South, empathy

Scout Finch is six years old. Her father Atticus is defending Tom Robinson, a Black man accused of raping a white woman in 1930s Alabama. Through Scout’s eyes, the reader sees both the horror of injustice and the possibility of courage. It is one of the most-read novels in history, and it earns that status on every page.

Why Start Here

To Kill a Mockingbird is Lee’s only major novel, and it is sufficient. The child narrator gives the story its power: Scout does not fully understand what she is witnessing, but the reader does, and the gap between her innocence and the reader’s knowledge creates an emotional effect that is almost unbearable. Atticus Finch, her father, became the most admired character in American fiction, a man who does the right thing not because it is easy but because he cannot do otherwise.

The novel works as both a coming-of-age story and a portrait of Southern racism, and the intersection of the two is what makes it more than a moral lesson. Lee writes with warmth, humor, and a sharp eye for the details of small-town life. The courtroom scenes are among the most gripping in American literature.

What to Expect

A warm, accessible novel narrated by a child. The prose is clear, the humor genuine, and the emotional payoff earned. The trial occupies the central section. The ending is devastating. Suitable for all ages. Over forty million copies sold.

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