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Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird gave the world one of its most fascinating heroines: Scout Finch
Rhonda Shook | February 19, 2021 - 8:00 am
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CREDIT: Ben Martin/Getty Images
When I was growing up, interesting young female protagonists were thin on the ground, especially ones who looked and thought and sounded like me. Enter Scout Finch, disheveled, scrappy and precocious, she leapt off the page and into my heart, compliments of Nelle Harper Lee.
To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960. Instantly successful, it won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and would go on to become
the classic of American Literature, selling thirty million copies. So far. A staple of high school English classes, despite its dark adult themes of domestic violence, racism, and rape,