It’s no pleasantry and it challenges the reader on the fundamental levels of humanity. Told through the eyes of innocence, and with no little gentle humour this is actually still not an easy book. ![]() What struck me as I listened to this audio version 35 years later is that those messages are as relevant and important today as they were in my youth and as they were in the time the book was set. Yes, Mockingbird, was *my* book and spoke to me like few others have before or since. I am certainly not going to preach about what they are but they have been enshrined in my psyche ever since and some key phrases have often anchored me in times of difficulty. Read during my school years growing up in a multicultural town the central messages behind Harper Lee’s story are not revolutionary, they aren’t massively clever but they go to the core of my struggles while growing up. There are, I’m afraid, no prizes for guessing that in my case it was To Kill a Mockingbird. Either way they never leave us and I doubt it’s unusual that they are often books read during our formative years. ![]() ![]() Whether it is through sheer exuberance for the story or because the book carried a message that resonated with us. I’m talking about the books which don’t simply excite or entertain but they leave you changed in some way. I think every avid reader has one particular book, or maybe even a few if they are lucky which leave an indelible mark on them.
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