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What Is The Tone In To Kill A Mockingbird

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To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel that retells the realism of racism and how it affects innocent lives throughout history. The entire story itself isn’t far from the sad truth; an African American by the name of Tom Robinson, was accused of a crime and was almost wrongly convicted due to the color of his skin. The female accuser, Mayella Ewell, was a part of the poorest family in all of the town which was referred by everyone in Maycomb as “trash.” The main character/narrator of the story is named Scout Finch; she was not a part of the richest family in Maycomb but certainly was not a part of the poorest family either. Her father’s name is Atticus Finch and he is a lawyer that will come to defend Tom in the trial; his goal is to show that the color of someone’s skin doesn’t matter. …show more content…

The Ewell’s had no right to accuse an innocent man of a crime that he had nothing to do with, especially since the girl was never raped in the first place. Racism since after the days of slavery, has died down quite a bit; but it shall never go away just so long as people are biased. The tone of the story fluxuates from sad to sweet to humorous throughout, but I dare say the overall tone is serious due to the main point that a man's life is on the line. The children (Scout and her brother, Jem) all hear stories about the Radley house and how it’s supposedly haunted by the son that was said to have died, Boo. Thus triggering the children’s sense of

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