To Kill a Mockingbir
, • The novel is the story of ‘growing up and change’ –in
understanding and sympathy as well as in age; developm
in depth as well as in time; a growth of awareness which
affects others besides the two children who are at the hea
of the story.
• It throws an important light over an area of human
experience wider than the small town that provides the
story’s setting.
• The process of expansion sympathy and understanding an
the increasing awareness is also experienced by the reade
who ‘grows and changes’ in the course of reading a novel
which shows that fear and hatred spring from ignorance a
understanding.
, • The novel is the story of ‘growing up and change’ –in
understanding and sympathy as well as in age; developm
in depth as well as in time; a growth of awareness which
affects others besides the two children who are at the hea
of the story.
• It throws an important light over an area of human
experience wider than the small town that provides the
story’s setting.
• The process of expansion sympathy and understanding an
the increasing awareness is also experienced by the reade
who ‘grows and changes’ in the course of reading a novel
which shows that fear and hatred spring from ignorance a
understanding.