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To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel written in 1960 by Harper Lee. It won a Pulitzer Prize the following year for its allegorical tale of racial injustice in the Deep South. It is told through the eyes of a young child (Scout), whose father (Atticus) is a lawyer coming to the defense of a black man wrongfully accused of rape. The title comes from a metaphor which means that it is a sin to kill an innocent creature that is misunderstood; the protagonist follows his moral compass to defend the weak.
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