To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee: A Literary Analysis

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It’s truly amazing how just a little advice can make a world’s difference. Harper Lee is a well known author, due to her novel To Kill a Mockingbird. This novel takes place during the great depression in the small town of Maycomb, Alabama. The narrator’s name Jean Louise Finch, whom is often referred to as “Scout”. Her father is Atticus Finch, a well known lawyer in Maycomb. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Atticus takes the defense of a negro commonly known as Tom Robinson, who is being accused of the rape of a white woman by the name of Mayella Ewell. Scout and her brother, Jem, discover just how twisted and racist the people of Maycomb are when they sneak into Tom Robinson’s trial to watch their father. Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman features …show more content…

Not only did Go Set a Watchman lack a stable story line, or really a story line at all. The novel fails to stay on point which causes it to be confusing to readers at times. Which was one of the main reasons Harper Lee refused to publish anything after To Kill a Mockingbird became so popular, she didn’t believe she could produce a book that would amount to To Kill a Mockingbird. Which Go Set a Watchman certainly did not amount to To Kill a Mockingbird, if anything, it left a bad aftertaste of a story in reader's heads. Plus, just because there is an age gap between characters in both novels, or that Go Set a Watchman was published after To Kill a Mockingbird, does not mean that Go Set a Watchman is a sequel because it isn’t. Many sections in Go Set a Watchman are repeated in To Kill a Mockingbird. Showing how Harper Lee most likely wrote To Kill a Mockingbird. In the end, with helpful advice from her editor, Harper Lee took a mess of a draft and changed it into something