Boo is innocence in most likely its purest form in the novel. He never did anything truly wrong, unlike other characters like Bob Ewell. Boo didn't do all the terrible things he was accused of, like eating animals, and yet he became a subject of torment from Maycomb's children because of the past he had suffered. Boo is introduced early in the novel by Lee as being “...about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks;
Boo is innocence in most likely its purest form in the novel. He never did anything truly wrong, unlike other characters like Bob Ewell. Boo didn't do all the terrible things he was accused of, like eating animals, and yet he became a subject of torment from Maycomb's children because of the past he had suffered. Boo is introduced early in the novel by Lee as being “...about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks;