I Swore Never to Read Again After Killing a Mockinbird Didnt Teach Me

W hat better fourth dimension to revisit the lessons and impressions of To Impale a Mockingbird than while we wait for Harper Lee's new novel, Go Set up a Watchman – coming out this Tuesday, in example you missed it. Hither is a choice of our readers' memories and stories virtually the classic – you lot can run across them all, and contribute your ain, hither.

The human being on the train understood

"I was reading To Kill a Mockingbird on the railroad train en route to a university open 24-hour interval. I got to the scene where Atticus walks out of the courtroom, and Scout is told to stand up upwardly along with the rest of the public gallery, and I broke downward in tears. I must have looked an absolute sight, considering the man in a business suit opposite me asked me if I was all right. I held up To Impale a Mockingbird. He smiled, gave me a tissue and said 'I empathise.'" Past victoriaf1991

The first fourth dimension I felt grown upwards

"To Impale a Mockingbird was the first book I can remember reading and actually comprehending. The whole time I was reading it, I merely felt so grown up. The emotions information technology envoked in me were not what I was used to in my everyday life equally a child. I was sorry, and outraged. I formed actual opinions on things in this world that mattered." Past LP Maxa

Boo Radley's Tavern

"I had been to Boo Radley's several times but never made the connection until I plant the name in the second paragraph of To Kill a Mockingbird. Funny thing, none of the servers always mentioned it. I gauge, they idea everyone knew!" By PullandKick74

TKAM
Photograph: PullandKick74/GuardianWitness

My favourite novel to teach in high school English

"I first read the novel when I was preparing to teach information technology 20 years agone. I have since so taught it and read it about that many times, and I confess that it's my favourite novel of all time. It'due south the ONLY novel I've read that can truly exist described equally "charming" and "groundbreaking" in the same sentence. Jean Louise'southward descriptions of the town of Maycomb, her childhood want to "brand Boo Radley come out," her innocent courage in front of the court firm the night before the trial, and her love of her father are all elements of the novel that continue to engage the reader on every visit to the novel. It is a beautifully written story of courage. I never tire of meeting upward with Lookout, Jem, Dill, Cal, Boo Radley, and, of course, one of the greatest heroes in literature, Atticus Finch. I envy anyone who is opening its pages for the get-go time." By walkerk

Suddenly I started to become the person I wanted to exist

I read To Kill a Mockingbird at school. Information technology inverse my life – information technology taught me a fundamental lesson in life (that to understand someone, y'all have to walk around in their skin) and it introduced me to my literary hero in Atticus Finch. Growing up with very conservative parents, suddenly a whole new earth opened up to me and I started to become the person I wanted to be. The book has guided me throughout my life, didactics me compassion and kindness to all. Past CornwallJo

TKAM
"One copy is not enough – schoolhouse copy and anniversary edition," shared by LM Chapman. Photograph: GuardianWitness

I bawled my eyes out in course (and I was the teacher)

"I used to teach English in secondary schools, and taught To Kill a Mockingbird whenever I could. In particular, I adored Atticus – and all the same exercise – for his upholding of justice whatever the cost, but likewise because he is the perfect father.

The final pages of the volume, where Atticus sits vigil through the night with Jem ('He would be there all nighttime, and he would exist there when Jem waked upwardly in the morn'), I had never been able to get through without crying. When I taught it, I made certain a educatee summarised the chapter for the course so I wouldn't have to introduce that flake.

And so, i solar day when I was due to embrace the concluding chapter with a class, the pupil who'd prepared it was ill. I did information technology myself, merely when I reached that concluding paragraph I could feel myself starting to wobble. I stalled. I gritted my teeth. But in the end I just started crying.

Information technology was mortifying – I still remember the gobsmacked faces of the students - but it was also testament to the power of literature, and the power of that volume in item – a novel you never get jaded about, a novel that never fails to motility." By grafter

The book that taught me to read

"I had always struggled in school and reading was a chore. I read the words but never understood what they meant. The freshman year of high school I was assigned To Kill a Mockingbird. Something changed as I started to exist drawn into this volume. The characters became friends and neighbors. I was given a certain number of pages to read and exceeded the assignment. I was for the first time in my life reading for the dear of the story. To this twenty-four hour period, reading is a part of my life I am forever grateful to have discovered through this book. I honor the book with the names of my babies, iv-legged ones, and live with two dogs named Scout and Gem (alter of spelling for a change in sex, she is a girl) and the newest addition of Boo, a kitten." By Sherry Myers

My fashion in to grown-up literature

"Forth with A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Of Mice and Men, the books of Truman Capote, Carson McCullers, William Faulkner and others, To Impale a Mockingbird introduced me to American literature, which I connected with in a fashion I didn't with very much British literature. These authors (and many others that followed on from them) speak about what is universally human through ordinary lives." By MichaelRC

Perfect prose – and my first full-on literary crush

"I first read this when I was 15, every bit a fix text at school. As with many things at that age information technology consumed me, and I can still feel those pages between my fingers, the press of the wooden schoolhouse chair on my legs, as our English instructor read to us. I savage in love, with Atticus of course, my first full-on literary crush, only also with the lush, evocative linguistic communication which transported me so clearly to a fourth dimension and identify I never knew. 22 years since I first opened those pages, I all the same love to plough this description over in my mouth, it is just the nearly perfect prose:

Ladies bathed before noon, after their three-o'clock naps, and past nightfall were like soft teacakes with frostings of sweat and sweet talcum."

By VitaM

Miss Maudie's Lane Cake

"To Impale a Mockingbird was my favourite book as a teenager. I used to read information technology every summer in the roasting Australian lord's day, feeling an affinity with Jem, Lookout and Dill – sweating through the summer with them. But despite the oestrus (and unlike my sister and I, who survived each Jan on a diet of raspberry ice-blocks), Maycomb residents are still baking cakes.

The classic Southern Lane Block appears a couple of times in the book, more often than not as a welcome, and almost certainly to allow the baker to show off their blistering finesse. Miss Maudie tells Scout that Miss Stephanie, who has been later on her recipe for thirty years, will never learn her secrets. Sadly, this holds true for us too, so I've developed my ain." By Kate Young

cake
"Maycomb welcomed Aunt Alexandra. Miss Maudie Atkinson broiled a Lane Cake so loaded with shinny it made me tight…" Reader Kate Young baked this cake inspired by that passage. Notice more of her literature-inspired recipes on this gallery.

Teaching in Arab republic of egypt

"This was a set book for a class of xiii-year-onetime Egyptian children. They had problem with the vocabulary at times, great fun with 'cootie' – ane girl asked me the meaning of 'flighty'. When I explained, she said, 'You mean like me, Miss?' But they definitely got the story. They empathised with virtually of the characters. Nosotros did the play that twelvemonth too and it was a great hit. Then much enthusiasm." By chicamisr

Raised in the South, I wholeheartedly related

"Raised by parents from the Southward, I wholeheartedly related to the humor and idioms of this book when reading it for my English language class in eighth class. It was one of the first books that I tin can think that sparked my involvement in literature and that helped shape my writing style. Now, equally an developed and English teacher myself, I seem to better understand its themes of perseverance, empathy, and pity. The gritty realism of the volume demonstrates the prevalent cultural norms of the fourth dimension, and the steadfast fortitude of Atticus and Mrs. Maudie shows the existence of those who opposed such attitudes. In that location is also a great balance in Atticus's grapheme, and it is what makes him i of the greatest American literary heroes." By Blake Downs

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Source: https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2015/jul/13/your-stories-about-to-kill-a-mockingbird

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