To kill a mockingbird, novel by Harper Lee. In the book moral ideas are communicated through different devices, inexplicitly through most means- and by never forcing opinions on the reader. Putting her own own views forward, Harper Lee experiments with what we could deem as her own personal experience, and putting them into a young, naive female character.

Using the questions that bury themselves inside an intrigued character, those questions and ponders about society influence the reader to also think about the reasons behind stereotypes in society. As is well known about the current time and placings of the book’s setting racism was prominent, however never directly stated by any character in the book. The background racism was simply presumed by everyone, not questioned very often- because blaming the black people was an easy escape goat for any possible circumstance. However growing up in a family that sees Calpurnia- a black maid -as an equal to them and part of the family, the phase of growing up and questioning life