In “To Kill a Mockingbird” the scene that I think; that I like the best is, when Boo Radley all of a sudden appears, and goes to help the kids when; they were in danger because; Bob Ewell tried to hurt the kids. The reason why it’s my favorite part is; because I think it was very heroic of Boo saving the kids from of Bob Ewell. In chapter 28 it talks about the jem and scout; walking home and then Bob Ewell comes out; and tries to hurt the kids; but then Boo; comes out of nowhere; and saves the kids from Bob Ewell. Also, when Boo Radley takes jem; to his house because he was unconscious because Bob Ewell had harmed Jem.
In part one, Jem and Scout are terrified of Boo Radley because of stories they have heard. They have never actually seen or talked to him and yet they are still children and believe most of the things they hear. The stories about Boo eating cats and squirrels are enough to scare them out of their shoes. The children love to play the game they made called “Boo Radley” which always
Arthur ‘Boo’ Radley is also very courageous throughout the novel. Boo contacts the children and gifts them items, wraps Scout in a blanket at Miss Maudie’s house fire, and rescues Jem and Scout from Bob
Jem initially acts childish but starts to think and act like an adult to decisions where he previously would take the immature route. Jem demonstrates his child-like thinking with his vivid imagination. Jem’s imagination has distorted his image of Boo Radley a neighbor with a mysterious past Jem fictitiously describes Boo as a person
9. Boo Radley is so important in the novel because he teaches Scout not to judge others on assumptions and that people are really kind. Boo is a character who throughout the novel is judged based on assumptions. The children fantasize about him, yet he is a mystery to them. In their distraction of trying to find out about Boo, they miss him present in their lives. By the end of the novel when Scout finally sees Boo, she realizes how he has cared for them throughout the years and imagines life from his point of view. The children are so fascinated with him because they do not really know who he actually is. They are obsessed with the idea of him. Perhaps this is because he is one of the only mysteries in their small town, the one they know least about. However, Jem and Scout fear Boo, an innocent man. I think it is appropriate that Boo saves them so that Scout would have the realization that you don't really understand a
From the beginning to the end of the book, Jem transformed from Scout’s playmate and older brother to a person whom she looked up to and followed. Jem learns a great deal throughout the events of the novel, just like Scout. During the trial, Jem is extremely enthusiastic and believed that there is no way they could possibly lose. Jem’s confidence is seen when he talks to the Reverend and says “don’t fret, we’ve won it… don’t see how any jury could convict on what we heard” (208). When the guilty verdict came back, Jem is distraught: “His face was streaked with angry tears as we made our way through the cheerful crowd. ‘It ain’t right,’ he muttered” (212). This is the first time Jem truly sees racism. His eyes are opened to the more depraved side of Maycomb and because of this, he is no longer as innocent as before and he no longer only sees the good in others. After seeing how harsh the real world can be, Jem has a slightly different outlook towards Boo Radley, and says to Scout, “I’m beginning to understand why Boo Radley’s stayed shut in the house all this time… it’s because he wants to stay inside” (227). Jem and Scout mature a great amount through the span of three years in which the novel takes place over, and this can also be seen in the conflicts that they face and their reactions to
In the book To Kill a Mockingbird Boo Radley, a known monster in the neighborhood, lives near Scout, six, and Jem, ten. Boo Radley is known as monster because he has not been seen out of the house in years and it has been said he stabbed his dad in the leg. Jem and Scout have been finding gift left by Boo in the hole of a tree.
From a transition of the slap of the house to this, Scout learns that Boo is actually a nice guy and wants to be friends with him. She thinks of the times that they would talk while he walked by and what they would talk about. From the beginning of the book Scouts interpretation on Boo changes from being scared to him being a real nice friend. The theme of courage is prominent and why courage is so many people like the children but also Boo
The racist beliefs of the townspeople cause many characters in the novel to be trapped. One character who is trapped is Tom Robinson. He is trapped by his trial because the racist jury refuses to believe the word of a black man over the word of a white man. The jury finds him guilty of rape and physically traps him in jail. Another trapped character is Dolphus Raymond, who is trapped because he cannot openly live the life he wants to live and must pretend to be a drunk in order to give the townspeople a reason for his behavior. If he were to publicly announce that he loves the black woman he lives with, he would be attacked by white supremacists and his children would be taken away from him. Boo Radley is trapped physically and by the beliefs of the townspeople and his
The classroom classic To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee contains much mystery surrounding a character called Boo Radley. He is rarely seen as he chooses to live an isolated life style and not leave his house unless it is out of necessity. This necessity presents itself towards the end of the novel when Bob Ewell, an unfriendly townsman tries to attack and kill Jem and Scout late at night in the street outside the Radley household. Because of the lack of light Scout is confused by this attack and rescue mission. When Heck Tate, the town sheriff and Atticus question her on what exactly went down she recites it best she can
My reasoning for claiming my main idea was when Jem realizes that someone has returned his pants after he lost it when trying to go to Boo Radley’s place. “You’ve never told me anything about that night”
As she stands on Boo’s porch, her imagination brings her into Boo’s shoes and she remembers the past year through his eyes. “Autumn again, and Boo’s children needed him.” (279) Scout imagines Boo seeing them as his kids and that is why he saves them from Mr. Ewell. Scout’s youth originally had her thinking Boo was scary and evil, but after he saves them, she knows he is just a quiet, shy, good person. Boo sacrifices everything to save Scout and Jem because he is a fantastic person on the
Arthur “Boo” Radley is a very mysterious character in the way that not a lot has been know about him, even from the beginning of the novel. Throughout To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, we continue to learn a little more about him. People in Maycomb fear the unknown properties of Boo. They created horrible rumors about him in order to answer their questions about him. For example, they claimed that he was dead and stuffed into the chimney, that he eats cats and dogs, and sneaks out during the night to look into people’s windows. Despite all of these horrible rumors, Boo Radley is a rather friendly character in To Kill a Mockingbird.
Criticism Killed The Mockingbird When they called you crybaby or poor or fatty or crazy And made you into an alien, You drank their acid And concealed it. (Ann Sexton) Courage, written by Ann Sexton, depicts a person courageous enough to accept their own differences, even when others don’t accept them. The negative response the person in this poem faces reminds us that differences are often criticized and leave us open to ridicule. Harper Lee elucidates a similar idea through the stories of her characters in her novel To Kill A Mockingbird. Taking place in the Jim Crow era, Lee’s novel tells a devastating story of racial prejudice as well as other prejudices that prove to be just as toxic.
In To Kill a Mockingbird Boo (Arthur) Radley helps Scout and Jem escape from Bob Ewell near the end of the story through friendship. Consequently,
Author, he’s asleep. You couldn’t if he was awake, he wouldn’t let you…’ I found myself explaining” (Lee 372). Scout talks to Boo as if she does everyday, this is because she does not want Boo to feel left out of alone anymore than he already does. Scout is a very outgoing person who can make anyone feel as though they belong even if that person does not think they do and we can see that here with her discussion with Boo. Succeeding this encounter, Boo makes the request for Scout to walk him home. Once they reach his house and he goes inside, Scout stands on the porch and views the world as he does. Replaying the events of the past summers through his eyes, Scout finally understands the ways of Boo’s world (Lee 374). This helps Scout mature by the reason of her interpreting his life. She now knows that Boo sees her life as an example, she has a loving family and a superior life which he wishes he could have. However, he knows that this is not a possibility.