I have no idea when I first read Harper Lee’s classic novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, but I would guess I was a teenager; the book was published in 1960 and made into a film two years later but I didn’t see the film until a long time after that.
We are reading it again for our book club, and I approached the task a little apprehensively as so many favourite books from long ago have some how lost their appeal to me. I shouldn’t have worried; it is a wonderful book, and truly and deservedly a classic. I must have read it many, many times, because as I am reading it now the words are so familiar, almost as if I know them by heart.
However, there are differences, the world is very different from the last time I read it in many ways and the latest horrific events in the USA cast a very different shadow across its pages. The attitudes to race which are portrayed one would have hoped had changed in the fifty-five years since it was written, bust sadly in some ways things are as bad if not worse than ever.
I have been surprised by my own reactions to some of the less controversial parts of the book; in the scene where the horrible Mrs Dubose dies, and the truth behind her difficulties is revealed, I found that I was very moved, quite unaccountably moved. I am only about halfway through and I guess there will be a lot more surprises as I come to the more upsetting parts, surprises in my reaction I guess.
I am looking forward to the book club meeting, I’m sure everyone will have enjoyed the book, and been moved by the narrative, and have a lot to talk about in the light of the controversial aspects of it… but who knows, book club meetings always have an unexpected point of view offered by someone!

I’ve read it so many times and fina a new truth every time.
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I’m astonished at how fresh it seems – I re-read ‘Catcher in the Rye’ recently and that hasn’t stood the test of time at all!
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It was a wonderful two days.
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