The book "Kill ing a Robin" by Harper Lee is considered an eternal classic including delicate topics such as prejudice, human dignity, social class, maturity. Mature, words have different meanings for all of us. Mature is an understanding of people who are not experienced, but they usually seem to be together, but it is not always the case. Many people talked about the experiences experienced by Scouts and the maturity she achieved in books, but they did not notice "growing" or matured other characters in the story.
Harper Lee wrote to kill Robin. Harper learns her childhood story in the 1930s in this novel. She is producing fictitious persons to provide privacy to homes and people. Killing the Robin Scouts in the novel is a fictitious name of the hero and Harper. Readers can see the maturity of the scout in various ways through books. When she first went to school, scouts had many maturity. Harper Lee's Robin Attack is an attractive story that attracts the attention of many readers. A scout finish, a hero and a narrator, or Genre Ease Finch tells the voice of a girl who grew up in a small town called Meikomu County in the 1930s. Her father, Atticus Finch, is a lawyer who is not racism in a highly prejudiced city. Throughout the novel, Harper Lee contains many themes, but that is one of them.
Harper Lee kills Mockingbird: The great father statue of Attikas Finch Harper Lee kills the novel in the residential area of Alabama in Maycomb County. It occurred in the early 1930's and was remembered by many as the beginning of the Great Depression. It was said by a small girl named Genre y "Scout" Finch; she lived with her brother Jeremy "Jem" finch and her father Attikas finch. In the novel, Atticus is representative of a lawyer.