To Kill a Mockingbird
by Harper Lee
5/5
Harper Perennial Modern Classics 336 pages July 11, 1960
Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about racial injustice in the Depression-era South, told through the eyes of young Scout Finch. Her father, attorney Atticus Finch, defends a Black man falsely accused of a crime in a powerful story about courage, compassion, and moral growth.
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Jim's Review
🐛
Atticus Finch is the literary hero Jim aspires to be (if worms could be lawyers). This book hit Jim right in the feels — Scout's innocence colliding with the ugliness of prejudice is storytelling at its finest. It's assigned in every English class for a reason: because it matters. Read it once for school, read it again for yourself. You'll get something new every time.
Jim's Weekly Worm Hole
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