Friday, April 20, 2012

Differences | C & C | Joseph Huynh # 4


 Differences—

Both of the novels have a certain style to them. To Kill a Mockingbird was written like a biography of a little girl, Scout. Frankenstein seemed more of a piece of fiction. To Kill a Mockingbird is a story about a racial discrimination within a small society of Alabama where a Tom Robinson, a black man, was accused of raping a white woman. Although this accusation is a lie, none of the white citizens in town would believe that the black man was innocent. To Kill a Mockingbird was focused on the humans. In Frankenstein, the story was focused on a monster and his early years living as a man made from body parts found in a graveyard. Frankenstein’s family was a rich family whereas Atticus and his family were poor throughout the Great Depression. To Kill a Mockingbird ends with Scout learning many valuable lessons throughout life about not judging anyone, putting oneself in another’s shoes, and that moral education is a must for a peaceful society. Frankenstein had more a sad ending because Frankenstein and his family basically. Frankenstein was ill numerous times and his health couldn’t stand the coldness and he died and his family was killed by the monster and heartbreak. Both novels are very different stories but they are very good novels and you cannot not go wrong with reading either one of them. I really enjoyed both of the novels and wish that these classics may still be read for decades to come. 

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