Essay Comparing To Kill A Mockingbird And Miracle In The Hills

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The early twentieth century was full of various ideals; every place had its own definition of normal. The books To kill a Mockingbird and Miracle in the Hills looks at to southern communities: Maycomb, Alabama and Crossnore, North Carolina. Though quite similar, they also both have stark differences. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Maycomb was full of a pleasant people, but everyone has their short comings. They were used to a very strict status-quo, that is, they were stuck in the ways of the past; their accustomed racism was most notable. Their innate prejudice against black people caused the town to go into hysterics when a black man was accused of rape by white woman. The story uses Jem and Scout, a brother-sister duo, to paint a metaphor of innocence and goodness. The two grew up in a well-off …show more content…
Where they were, they were greatly needed. Their town had hardly what it needed to survive. The couple did their best to serve their community, even though their town had a very deep distrust of outsiders. They fought often, especially when the wife, Mary Sloop, wanted to open a school for children. The town had no desire for a community school. The problem was Mary Sloop was seeing so much harm come to children. Her fear was for their safety and future. After witnessing several child marriages that were clearly doomed, she set a goal to rewrite everything the people were teaching their children. After much conflict with the townsmen, namely over the land she wanted to build on, she succeeded, the school was built, and reform began. To Kill a Mockingbird and Miracle in the Hills don’t have the same plot, but they have this in common: one person can make a difference. Atticus used the evils of the world to teach his children was really matters. Mary Sloop won over the stubborn people of her town to properly raise a generation of