Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird

Part of The Book Challenge

The Book Challenge number: 1

Start date: 1st January 2020

End date: 9th February 2020

Time taken to read: 40 days

Thoughts:

I really struggled to get into this book. I think I did not bond well with the protagonist. At first I thought Jean Louise or Scout as she is known as a teenage male to part way through the book realise she was a four year old girl did throw me a little.

I also found the book a little boring. I knew Atticus Finch was a character that is celebrated for his challenging prejudice, championing equal rights and morality…but I did not really know the story prior to reading it. I found it very slow to get to the court case and to begin to show the story that made Atticus to be a strong, moral character. I found those chapters very readable and I did not put it down. Yet then it faded again, but it carried you on willing to find Tom’s justice…to fizzle out again. Then as the last few chapters unfold you, again, get the build up on the walk back home from school, the tension building for the story to almost drop flat, as if in the middle of it. The book that relied so much on the gossip and reactions of the town, falling silent on the last dramatic evening of the book.

Not really knowing all that much about the American south and the culture of slave-owners and the lingering legacy of that in the south. I did enjoy reading about small town America and how society was structured and reading about some of the views. As someone who has studied history and in particular the Holocaust and understanding concepts of Race and Ethnicity. I liked the drawing a criticism of how it was seen as madness for Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany to terrorise Jews, persecute and arrest them and eventually find ‘the final solution for the Jewish question’ through extermination. Yet, similarly naively think that those in Maycomb were more civil, despite treating their fellow Americans, fellow human beings, as second class (or even fourth class citizens as the book implied) simply because of the colour of their skin.

Having read the book I champion the court case and the challenging an aspect of prejudice and injustice in society. I also praise the story for writing a fictionalised account that was inspired by real events. I just feel there was not enough of it in the book. I am glad to have read about Atticus Finch, but I can’t help but think I would have liked to have read about Amasa Coleman Lee (Harper Lee’s lawyer father) and some of his court cases more.

The Book Challenge

So for 2020, one of my goals is to read more books. Reading for me has always been a chore. I have dyslexia so reading has not been one of my strongest tasks. Often at the end of a busy day at school, I would be too frustrated to read for fun. Later, at University I had a degree that required a lot of reading (actually most degrees require that…) so reading for fun at the end of the day was never an option for me. Reading films as well can also be quite a challenge and requires me to pause the film for a bit and come back to it on occasion.

This year although I would like to see how far I can get down this 100 Books Everyone Should Read Before They Die (Ranked!) list from Business Insider.

Although the first thing I did was to change the order. A couple of authors appear on this list more than once (J.R.R. Tolkien and J.K. Rowling for example), I’ve moved them together so I can follow the book story, rather than chop and change to another book. I have a feeling I would, if I enjoyed the story, wish to continue with it, and for J.R.R. Tolkien in particular, The Lord of the Rings was ranked higher than the Hobbit, even though the Hobbit is set before. With J.K. Rowling I will probably break from the list and read the missing books from the series, so after Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, I would read the Chamber of Secrets and then come back to read the Prisoner of Azkaban. Also, I moved the Bronte sisters together as I thought it might be interesting to compare their styles.

One thing that perplexes me about this list is: why does the Lord of the Rings get lumped together as one book, when other series, like Harry Potter or the Hunger Games, get more than one listing on the top 100?

The challenge is to see how far down this list I can get in 12 months. Wish me luck!

  1. Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird (01/01/2020-09/02/2020)
  2. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
  3. Anne Frank – The Diary of Anne Frank
  4. George Orwell – 1984
  5. George Orwell – Animal Farm
  6. J.K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
  7. J.K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
  8. J.K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
  9. J.K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  10. J.R.R. Tolkien – The Hobbit
  11. J.R.R. Tolkien – The Lord of the Rings
    1. The Following of the Ring
    2. The Two Towers
    3. The Lord of the Rings
  12. F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby
  13. E.B. White – Charlotte’s Web
  14. Louisa May Alcott – Little Women
  15. Ray Bradbury – Fahrenheit 451
  16. Charlotte Bronte – Jane Eyre
  17. Emily Bronte – Wuthering Heights
  18. Margaret Mitchell – Gone with the Wind
  19. J.D. Salinger – The Catcher in the Rye
  20. Markus Zusak – The Book Thief
  21. Mark Twain – The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  22. Mark Twain – The Adventure of Tom Sawyer
  23. Suzanne Collins – The Hunger Games
  24. Suzanne Collins – Catching Fire
  25. Suzanne Collins – Mockingjay
  26. Kathryn Stockett – The Help
  27. C.S. Lewis – The Chronicles of Narnia
  28. C.S. Lewis – The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe
  29. John Steinbeck – The Grapes of Wrath
  30. John Steinbeck – Of Mice and Men
  31. John Steinbeck – East of Eden
  32. William Golding – The Lord of the Flies
  33. Khaled Hosseini – The Kate Runner
  34. Elie Wiesel – Night
  35. William Shakespeare – Hamlet
  36. William Shakespeare – Romeo and Juliet
  37. Williams Shakespeare  –  Macbeth
  38. Madeleine L’Engle – A Wrinkle in Time
  39. Charles Dickens – A Tale of Two Cities
  40. Charles Dickens – A Christmas Carol
  41.  Charles Dickens – Great Expectations
  42. Douglas Adams – The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
  43. Frances Hodgson Burnett – The Secret Garden
  44. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry – The Little Prince
  45. Aldous Huxley – Brave New World
  46. Lois Lowry – The Giver
  47. Margaret Atwood – The Handmaid’s Tale
  48. Shel Silverstein – Where the Sidewalk Ends
  49. John Green – The Fault in Our Stars
  50. L.M. Montgomery – Anne of Green Gables
  51. Stieg Larrson – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
  52. Mary Shelley – Frankenstein
  53. The Holy Bible: King James Version
  54. Alice Walker – The Color Purple
  55. Alexandre Dumas – The Count of Monte Cristo
  56. Betty Smith – A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
  57. Lewis Carroll – Alice in Wonderland
  58. Truman Capote – In Cold Blood
  59. Joseph Heller – Catch-22
  60. Stephen King – The Stand
  61. Diana Gabaldon – Outlander
  62. OrsonScott Card – Enders Game
  63. Leo Tolstoy – Anna Karenina
  64. Richard Adams – Watership Down
  65. Arthur Golden – Memoirs of a Geisha
  66. Daphne du Maurier – Rebecca
  67. George R.R. Martin- A Game of Thrones
  68. Ernest Hemingway – The Old Man and the Sea
  69. Arthur Conan Doyle – The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes (#3)
  70. Victor Hugo – Les Misérables
  71. Yann Martel – Life of Pi
  72. Nathaniel Hawthorne – The Scarlet Letter
  73. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar – Celebrating Silence: Excerpts from Five Years of Weekly Knowledge
  74. Ken Follett – The Pillars of the Earth
  75. Roald Dahl – Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
  76. Bram Stoker – Dracula
  77. William Goldman – The Princess Bride
  78. Sara Gruen – Water for Elephants
  79. Edgar Allan Poe – The Raven
  80. Sue Monk Kidd – The Secret Life of Bees
  81. Barbara Kingsolver – The Poisonwood Bible: A Novel
  82. Gabriel Garcí­a Márquez – One Hundred Years of Solitude
  83. Audrey Niffenegger – The Time Traveler’s Wife
  84. Homer – The Obyssey
  85. Pearl S. Buck – The Good Earth (House of Earth #1)
  86. Agatha Christie – And Then There Were None
  87. Colleen McCullough – The Thorn Birds
  88. John Irving – A Prayer for Owen Meany
  89. Jeannette Walls – The Glass Castle
  90. Rebecca Skloot – The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
  91. Fyodor Dostoyevsky – Crime and Punishment
  92. Cormac McCarthy – The Road
  93. Tim O’Brien – The Things They Carried
  94. Hermann Hesse – Siddhrtha
  95. Toni Morrison – Beloved
  96. Kurt Vonnegut – Slaughterhouse
  97. Abraham Verghese – Cutting for Stone 
  98. Norton Juster – The Phantom Tollbooth
  99. Fyodor Dostoyevsky – The Brothers Karamazov
  100. Helen Keller – The Story of My Life