As American as Apple Pie: The One Book You Need to Read to Understand America By Sarah Jane Abbott | Monday, June 30, 2014 Off the Shelf
When I started to re-read the novel (which I had not read since high school English), I was struck by the mastery with which Ms. Lee captured the experience of coming of age in America. Though Scout grows up in the Deep South in the 1930s and I grew up in New Jersey in the 1990s, her voice and her experiences resonated deeply with me. In reading about her mixture of fear and fascination with the Radley house, I was reminded of the house at the end of my block. On Halloween, my friends and I skipped it. But the year that we didn’t, we were rewarded with a kind smile and a king-sized candy bar each. In Mrs. Dubose, I see our grouchy, elderly neighbors who once called the police on my parents for not keeping the lawn mowed. Scout’s experiences with the cruelty of other children and confusion at the unfairness of the way society sometimes functions are surely shared by every child, including myself. Those first moments where she sees Atticus not just as her father, but as a flawed and fragile human, are part of the universal experience of growing up. Scout’s voice is humorous, unfailingly honest, and incredibly real. I feel like I know her, like she was my own childhood friend. -
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