It's been a long year, mr. principal. Some people cope by reading or drawing, I cope by calling Atticus Finch a dilf in my To Kill A Mockingbird essay.
The poll is over, but I find it ironic that this got in my feed while my class is reading TKaM
Atticus Finch - To Kill a Mockingbird / Egon Spengler - Ghostbusters
If you like what I’m doing, reblog so others can participate! And remember: Bring your favorites up, don’t bring the others down!
“Hell is eternal apartness”
How to kill the seriousness of the theme (Mockingbird)... 😂
when zac oyama said
“boo! did i radley ya?”
Im putting all of my favorite things here to pin so I can introduce myself to people and maybe make some online friends!
Name: Haley
Age: 17
Pronouns: She/Her
🌾Things I like🌾
John Steinbeck and Ed Ricketts (main interest)
DC Comics
WATCHMEN!!!
The Question and Mister Miracle
Gravity Falls
Kurt Vonnegut
Nerdfighteria
The Mountain Goats, The Talking Heads, The Beatles, Elvis Costello
To Kill a Mockingbird
Owls
M*A*S*H
My Top 5 Favorite Books of 2021 <3
“To kill a Mockingbird” is not like other classics. Many of us think that classics are usually big and a bit boring. But this novel is not at all like this. It is soo good and enjoyable from the very beginning. The writing style of Harper Lee is very natural and understanding.
The novel has represented many matters of the society very clearly through a young girl’s eyes. Many discriminatory factors of the society has been discussed thoroughly. This is a very simple novel but the simplicities are explained seriously. In fact, the whole novel is very pleasant to read and it has soo many details in it.
The society of the Maycomb County is an interesting one though in a peculiar way because everyone knows about other other people’s every business. Even Jem and Scout know very little affairs of others like who’s loosing his third teeth which is really funny.
The characters in this book is well described. I obviously loved the character of “Atticus”. It seems soo good that almost like every interesting character in any good novel is a reader. He is a great father and adviser as well. I am really proud that he is also a fellow INFJ! Some of his quotes are really mesmerizing. One of them is like” Before I can live with other folks, I’ve got to live with myself”. Another one is “A gang of wild animals can be stopped, simply because they’re still human”. He is great teacher and this thing that he literally shares many of his experiences and many other good things about people to his children and that is what making his children so smart and brave.
I adore the relationship between Scout and Calpurnia. I have also loved some of the Cal’s dialogues like “It’s the same God, ain’t it?” And about Scout I would say, She is really and extraverted girl. And, the brother-sister relationship between Jem and Scout is very sweet. One of the Jem’s dialogue is strong too like “Clowns are sad, it’s folks that laugh at them”. One of the best part of the book is Scout, Jem and Dill’s acting of different plays as summer games.
I can’t complete this review without mentioning one of the Tom Robinson’s dialogue. The most touchy one is “I’s scared I’d be in court, just like I am now”. Even Mr. Ewell’s character didn’t seems that bad. After all, he was a war veteran and never learned any behaviors so he obviously has his reasons to behave the ways he behaves.
Now. I will talk about some of the scenarios I have loved. Like I have enjoyed the church part. I have never been to any church. So the scenery was new to me and hence was a new experience. The court scene was great too. I have made another new experience regarding the court stuffs. This scene was explained with details and it was really easy to get along with. Some small details of the book is soo good that I really can’t bus just appreciate them. Like, in the court scene, in the middle of this serous event, Scout (as she is a child) didn’t even forget to tell Dill to have a look at the judge who was smoking cigar in his peculiar way. As they are kids, of course they will be noticing and enjoying these little things more. Overall, the scenes in the novel are explained very distinctly which make the novel very atmospheric.
Reading the book, I have realized that it isn’t actually only about discrimination that occurs in the society but also mostly about how we tend to judge people outwardly. Every person is very different on the inside that we don’t seem to know by knowing them outwardly. I would definitely recommend this atmospheric, natural book to everyone irrespective of age.
um, yes please, bring them books here!!!
Giveaway Contest: We’re giving away fifteen vintage paperback classics by Maya Angelou, James Joyce, Jean Rhys, Albert Camus, Shakespeare, and others! Won’t this collection look lovely on your shelf? :D To win these classics, you must: 1) be following macrolit on Tumblr (yes, we will check. :P), and 2) reblog this post. We will choose a random winner on June 30, at which time we’ll start a new giveaway. And yes, we’ll ship to any country. Easy, right? Good luck!
I’ve realized that generations of people have read To Kill a Mockingbird and have come to the conclusion based on writing alone that Mr. Atticus Finch is FINE
and I am one of these people, I am apart of a legacy.
“Im literally him” so close! Actually I am a dying, rabid dog in the scorching hot streets of Maycomb, Alabama, about to get shot by lawyer dilf
I mean, a fictional widowed lawyer who reads a lot and advocates for racial justice is sexy as hell
atticus finch is a dilf
just discovered RSL was Atticus Finch in a 2013 play of To Kill a Mocking Bird. I’m going insane trying to find any photo or video evidence of this.
THE SERIES GOES ON :
Gregory Peck !!
To Kill A Mocking Bird By Harper Lee
"Shoot all the blue jays you want,if you can hit'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a mocking bird"
This book throws light on various topics like prejudice, racism, civil rights, gender roles, perception, integrity without discussing them explicitly yet showing us a way to comprehend all of the topics and their effects on society.
The events take place in Maycomb, Alabama around the 1930s. It is as seen through the eyes of Scott Finch, a young bright girl of 6, inquisitive and brave to say the least. The book has the power to connect with the reader at a deeper level and help change the perspective on how one sees the world and the people in it.
mrsatticusfinch:
OMG. I NEED THESE.
If Harper Lee sold alcohol I think it’d be branded “Tequilla Mockingbird”