To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee: Chapter Analysis

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To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. It was published in 1960. It’s a famous novel that’s talking about racism. The story takes place in America where racism was a normal thing. You can make a lot of connections from the novel to your real life. The connection that I’ve chosen was in chapter 13, page 178. And the passage is, “For no reason I felt myself beginning to cry, but I could not stop. This was not my father. My father was never thought these thoughts. My father never spoke so. Aunt Alexander had put him up to this, somehow.”. In that passage, Aunt Alexandra was making some troubles between Atticus and his kids, Jem & Scout. Scout was very upset from her Aunt & how she was changing her father. I connected this particular chunk …show more content…

She was very weak inside but trying to show the opposite just for her siblings. After a while, her father got married to another women. The women was taking care of the house for about a year, but things completely changed. The new wife, started to show her real face. She secretly tease my friend by making her do all the housework by herself. My friend stayed silent without telling her father fearing that he’s not going to believe her. She told me what she wanted and keeps some secrets for herself. Forcing Aseel to do all the housework wasn’t enough for the stepmother. She told lies about Aseel to her father trying to defame her in front of her father. The father’s confidence of his daughter wasn’t strong so, he surely believed everything his wife told. His couldn’t trust his daughter but believed in her inside his heart. She cried every night wishing it was a dream and don’t face the reality. I chose this chunk because the same thing happened with Aseel and Scout and they both faced the same problem. For both of them, someone got in their life, changed it and completely ruined it for them. Both of their fathers changed because of someone they will always