By Victoria Englert
To Kill a Mockingbird is a classic of English-language literature. In practically every high school in the USA the students have to read this book. The story takes place in Alabama in 1936. The narrator, six-year-old Scout, lives with her brother Jem and her father Atticus, a lawyer. In the summer, Scout and Jem meet Dill, a boy who comes to visit every summer and the three of them start making up stories about their neighbour, Boo Radley, who has been living in the house in front of them for a long time, although few people ever see him. When the school year starts, Boo starts leaving presents for the two kids in a tree, but the siblings are sad because they never see him.
Meanwhile, Atticus is assigned a case that will turn his and his family's life around. He has to defend Tom Robinson, a black man (who in those years were called “niggers”) who has been accused of raping a white girl, Mayella Ewell. Atticus accepts the case, but everyone in Scout's school starts calling her Dad a "nigger-lover", and Scout starts getting into fights to defend her father's reputation.
When the day of the trial comes, Scout, Jem and Dill sneak inside the court house because Atticus doesn't allow them to go. There, Atticus says that Mayella and her father are lying, that Tom did not commit the crime, but in those years people did not like black people so everyone thought he was really guilty.
As Atticus humiliated Bob Ewell, Mayella's father, the latter spits in Atticus' face on the street and swears he will kill him. One night, when Jem and Scout are returning from a Halloween party, Bob Ewell attacks them and breaks Jem's arm. It is then that a man comes and saves them and takes them home. They later find out that the mysterious man is actually Boo Radley, and Scout is fascinated. The sheriff comes and they find out that Bob was killed during the struggle. Atticus says that either Jem or Boo were responsible for the death, but the sheriff, trying to protect them, says that Bob slipped and fell on his knife. Finally Atticus agrees on what happened and they leave it at that.
I am not going to tell you how the story ends, but this is really a book worth reading. What I liked most about this book is that it mixes thriller, comedy and insight to make the perfect book.