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To Kill a Mockingbird
Article written by Onyekachi Osuji
B.A. in Public Administration and certified in Creative Writing (Fiction and Non-Fiction)
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee begins with Scout Finch, who reminisces on events that took place in her hometown from when she was six years to nine years old.
Scout, with her brother Jem, and their friend Dill undertake many childish ventures in a bid to unravel the phantom of a reclusive neighbor known as Boo Radley. As she grows older, Scout begins to see the sheer injustice of racial discrimination and prejudice in her society when her father Atticus Finch, who is a lawyer, defends a black man falsely accused of raping a white woman.
Having seen what an unjust society they live in, the children begin to reason that perhaps Boo is right in shutting himself away from the world.
Key Facts about To Kill a Mockingbird
- Title: To Kill a Mockingbird
- Publication Year: 1960
- Number of Pages: 273
- Literary Period: Modern
- Genre: Bildungsroman
- Point of View: First-person Narration
- Setting: 1930s Al
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