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To Kill A Mockingbird Relationship Between Scout And Boo Radley Essay

862 Words4 Pages

Andrew Zikmund
Miss Olson
English 10
12 January 2023
Friendship of Boo Radley and the Children To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel that has been read through the years since 1960. Written by Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird was a personal memoir, even though it is fiction. While this book holds many valuable lessons and details about relationships, one relationship sticks through the novel. The relationship between Boo Radley and the children change throughout the novel, showing how important the theme of prejudice is in To Kill a Mockingbird.
The first instances of prejudice from the children towards Boo Radley is in the beginning of the novel. Jem and Scout are afraid of Boo Radley because they hear rumors about him.
Jem and Scout are told rumors about Boo Radley and they believe them, they start to judge Boo without even knowing Boo personally. Jem states, “Boo was about six and a half feet tall, judging from his tracks;he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch”(Lee 14). Jem is acting judgemental towards Boo’s appearance and …show more content…

Arthur Radley (Boo) is a quiet and timid man.In the end Scout realizes that Arthur is just a timid man who doesn't have good social skills. She comes to realize that he’s not the monster that they once thought he was. Boo asks, “Will you take me home?”(Lee 320). He almost whispered it, the voice of a child afraid of the dark. In this quote Boo asks Scout to bring him home. Scout is a young girl and Boo is a grown man, this just shows he’s a timid, scared, and quiet man. The opinions of Scout completely flip upside down after meeting Boo, all the things she thought of him, like being a monster etc, are untrue and she now realizes that. In conclusion, when Scout experiences Boo and realizes her opinions were wrong, all her prejudiced thoughts and opinions go away after she has her own experiences with

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