“Every man’s island, Jean Louise, every man’s watchman, is his
conscience.”
In Harper Lee’s first novel Go Set A Watchman, Scout returns to her
hometown of Maycomb, Alabama to visit her father. Upon arrival, she begins remembering
things of the past of the small town she grew up in. She also begins to see
many differences. Set during the era of civil rights movements and racial
tension, Scout finds herself dumbfounded by the behavior of people in her town,
including her father, Atticus. As she begins to learn secrets about her once
close-knit family, she begins to doubt her beliefs and what she thinks she
knows about her family and learns that what will guide her is her conscience.
I
gave this book 3 out of 5 stars. I did like it well enough but I feel like it
dragged on sometimes. I did like that it did relate a lot to To Kill A Mockingbird. Since it was
written before To Kill A Mockingbird,
I was worried it wouldn’t relate enough to the other book. This book is
technically the second book to To Kill A
Mockingbird, even though this novel was written before it. Harper Lee made
a lot of the stories the same except for one major detail that honestly could’ve
changed a lot in To Kill A Mockingbird
which did bother me a little. A lot of the characters were the same and I like
that as well except for one character who did change. I would recommend it to
others because it was a good enough read and it was interesting to read this
novel 60 years after it was actually written. If you want to read this novel, you
should read To Kill A Mockingbird first
because knowing in depth about Scout’s childhood will help you understand her
behavior towards certain situations in this novel. All in all, I liked this
novel well enough.
4 comments:
Sounds like a great read!!!
I am definitely going to read this, and am wondering if I need to reread TKAM first?! What do you think?
Sounds like a wonderful read!! I probably will read it sometime.
I really enjoyed "To Kill A Mockingbird" and it's storyline so it's exciting to see that this book is similar but with a twist. I liked review of this book.
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