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Just finished "Go Set a Watchman." I was very impressed. It has a very similar style to "To Kill a Mockingbird," so stylistically, if you like that book, this should work as well.
Spoiler alert - there is no way to talk about the book without giving some of the plot away, so please only read on if you are okay with that.
As to the controversy, TKAM is a fantastic morality play that, while nuanced in detail, at a high level has good guys and bad guys and we know who they are. It tells a wonderful story, brings the depression-era South to life, creates characters one feels they know and delivers a powerful message about the ugliness of racism and, via Atticus Finch, a positive message of human nature at its best.
GSAW's morality is more complex, unclear, of its time and anything but neat. That is was written in the 1950s is, IMHO, an wonderful artifact that displays several real-time windows into White and Black southern views toward desegregation. Some of it isn't pretty, especially to a 2015 value system, but it feels genuine. It is what many believed then, at least based on my understanding of the time.
As has been well publicized, Atticus Finch is not in favor a desegregation and this has shocked and angered many. While it did both to me, as the arguments are revealed, I felt he was a man of his times, no longer the perfect hero of TKAM, but a complex human being trying to adjust to a country moving faster than he believed was right and certainly faster than he could. I was impressed with the level and variety of arguments presented. Several views - some very modern and reasonably consistent with our views today - were asserted with passion and depth. It forces you to think, to re-read a paragraph or page, to thumb back a few more pages, to see where the flaw in the arguments are (or aren't).
Philosophically, this is a much more mature book than TKAM as it brings out more of the grey in its characters and arguments and it doesn't wrap it up in a neat bow. It isn't always fun - and to a 2015 worldview, some of it is very raw and ugly - but literature should challenge you, should force you to think about things from a different perspective and a different time period - and on that front, this book delivers.
While philosophically more mature, the book did seem uneven in parts and, in that sense, reveals an author still trying to master her craft. But it takes on so much more (including Scout's coming of age as a teenager juxtaposed with her more jaded mid-twenties, I've-lived-in-New-York-City self), that one can forgive its less-than-perfect execution. If one wants to re-read TKAM (which I did a few months ago), then it will fortunately always be there. If one wants to read a more complex and more flawed book, but still an impressive literary achievement, than GSAW will prove challenging but rewarding.
Spoiler alert - there is no way to talk about the book without giving some of the plot away, so please only read on if you are okay with that.
As to the controversy, TKAM is a fantastic morality play that, while nuanced in detail, at a high level has good guys and bad guys and we know who they are. It tells a wonderful story, brings the depression-era South to life, creates characters one feels they know and delivers a powerful message about the ugliness of racism and, via Atticus Finch, a positive message of human nature at its best.
GSAW's morality is more complex, unclear, of its time and anything but neat. That is was written in the 1950s is, IMHO, an wonderful artifact that displays several real-time windows into White and Black southern views toward desegregation. Some of it isn't pretty, especially to a 2015 value system, but it feels genuine. It is what many believed then, at least based on my understanding of the time.
As has been well publicized, Atticus Finch is not in favor a desegregation and this has shocked and angered many. While it did both to me, as the arguments are revealed, I felt he was a man of his times, no longer the perfect hero of TKAM, but a complex human being trying to adjust to a country moving faster than he believed was right and certainly faster than he could. I was impressed with the level and variety of arguments presented. Several views - some very modern and reasonably consistent with our views today - were asserted with passion and depth. It forces you to think, to re-read a paragraph or page, to thumb back a few more pages, to see where the flaw in the arguments are (or aren't).
Philosophically, this is a much more mature book than TKAM as it brings out more of the grey in its characters and arguments and it doesn't wrap it up in a neat bow. It isn't always fun - and to a 2015 worldview, some of it is very raw and ugly - but literature should challenge you, should force you to think about things from a different perspective and a different time period - and on that front, this book delivers.
While philosophically more mature, the book did seem uneven in parts and, in that sense, reveals an author still trying to master her craft. But it takes on so much more (including Scout's coming of age as a teenager juxtaposed with her more jaded mid-twenties, I've-lived-in-New-York-City self), that one can forgive its less-than-perfect execution. If one wants to re-read TKAM (which I did a few months ago), then it will fortunately always be there. If one wants to read a more complex and more flawed book, but still an impressive literary achievement, than GSAW will prove challenging but rewarding.
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