To Kill A Mockingbird written by Harper Lee is about a young girl named Jean Louise and her life events during The Great Depression. “The Great Depression was a time of devastation and uncertainty” (McCabe 1). While the novel is told through a child the reader can still see the effects the Depression had on the small town of Maycomb. The stock-market crash and the depression that followed changed the lives of both cities, farms, rich, and the poor (Hyde 20). Harper Lee was able to write Maycomb very indistinguishable from what it was like during the actual Depression. Small towns during the Depression were quite similar to Maycomb in Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird.
FIRST SIMILARITY
One of the similarities between small towns during The Great Depression and Maycomb in To Kill A Mockingbird is that people did not have any extra money. When the novel first starts out Jean Louise begin to describe the town she lives in. One of the first things she says about the town is that the people in the town had no money. “There was no hurry,
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Jean Louise and her brother Jem play with Dil throughout the novel. “Routine contentment was: improving our treehouse that rested between giant twin chinaberry trees in the backyard, fussing, running through our list of dramas” (Lee 9). Not only did the children in the book rely on playing with other kids for entertainment so did the kids who lived in small towns during the Depression. “Our main entertainment was having the neighbours over to play ball” (Ames 4). Kids would come up with all types of games. “We played follow the leader, climbing over logs and jumping down” (Jones 104). “Kids in the summer, they’d play ball” (Way 82). For kids the depression may not had been as hard as it was for adults but the still found ways to enjoy life even without