One of the most widely read novels in the past fifty years is To Kill a Mockingbird, which was written by Harper Lee in 1960 (Bernard 8). The story is about Atticus Finch’s defense of a wrongly accused black man while the story is told through the perspective of his daughter Jean Louise Finch, called Scout, and about her life as she grows up in a close together but racist community (Bloom 11). Since it is told through a young girl’s perspective, it is a story about a trial, yet also a childhood and growing up involving games and first days of school (Bernard 9). Scout keeps her charm as a “classic American tomboy” throughout the novel even if some of her elders disapprove of it (Bloom “Introduction”, par. 2). Harold Bloom described her as “Harper Lee’s book, being not only the narrator but much of its most interesting consciousness” (par. 2). As Scout becomes more mature, she has to come to new understandings of prejudice in a small community in the south, the natures of good and evil, and about compassion, hatred, and justice (Bernard 9).…