What makes to kill a mockingbird a classic?
A classic has lasting significance or worth enduring. It deals with complex issues which stimulate and challenge readers to consider the different aspects that are portrayed, making a novel unique and memorable. There are many important themes in Harper Lees To Kill a Mockingbird, which make it memorable to the reader. The major theme in this novel explores issues such as the destructive impact of racism, prejudice, injustice and the nature of justice and of humanity. The events of the novel are presented through the eyes of a young, naпve and innocent narrator who plays a big role in the theme of growing up and her untainted approach amongst a racist society. The characters and the events that take place in the little town called Maycomb represent the world. Characters such as Tom Robinson, Bob Ewell, Aunt Alexandra and Heck Tate exist in real life, not only in a story. The events that occur in the novel such as the racist attitudes of the town and the unjust ruling of the court are g