To Kill a Mockingbird...

Discussion in 'Books' started by Val1, Feb 14, 2011.

  1. Val1

    Val1 Member+

    Arsenal
    Mar 12, 2004
    MD's Eastern Shore
    Club:
    Arsenal FC
    I am having great fun re-reading some of the classics of high school literature as my daughter is reading them. We've had some great father-daughter moments the past two years.

    However, I have a question for anyone familiar with To Kill a Mockingbird, that most archtypical high school book. On the blurb on the back of the version I own, it says that Harper Lee just considered the book a "simple love story". I really am having trouble seeing that. Atticus obviously loves his kids and is doing his best to raise them for the New South, but it's not a love story. Lee is not really in love with the south or its rhythms.

    Any idea of what the love story is in this work?
     
  2. Iceblink

    Iceblink Member

    Oct 11, 1999
    Chicago
    Club:
    Ipswich Town FC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Atticus, yes. But don't forget Boo Radley. He really seemed to love the kids, even though he never even came out.

    It may even be a story of unconditional love of a very, very flawed South as well. Some pretty awful stuff happens, but I also remember almost longing for the small town life in some ways.
     
  3. os_mutante

    os_mutante Moderator
    Staff Member

    Aug 8, 2003
    City of Bad Carls
    Club:
    FC Barcelona
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    That would be my guess. Similar sort of sentiment (although not unconditional) as William Faulkner, a la Quentin Compson's "I don't hate the South!" at the end of Absalom, Absalom!.
     
  4. EvanJ

    EvanJ Member+

    Manchester United
    United States
    Mar 30, 2004
    Club:
    Manchester United FC
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Val1 repped this.
  5. Q*bert Jones III

    Q*bert Jones III The People's Poet

    Feb 12, 2005
    Woodstock, NY
    Club:
    DC United
    Aaron Sorkin is a f¨cking knob.

    He knows these lawsuits will fail eventually but in the meantime the threat of litigation has scared everybody off the Christopher Sergel version. He's using the courts to bully hundreds of tiny productions into using his expensive version of the play. Fück him and his lawyers with a rusty jig saw.
     

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