4 good links
- Atticus Finch
Detailed character description and analysis
- Gregory Peck in <i>To Kill A Mockingbird</i>
Celebration of Peck the actor and Finch the character
- Reconstructing Atticus Finch
A law professor stirs the pot with "maybe he ain't so great"
- Movie Speech: <i>To Kill A Mockingbird</i>
The text and audio file of Peck doing the trial's closing argument
Atticus Finch Biography
Atticus Finch is the exemplary lawyer and father from the 1960 Harper Lee novel To Kill A Mockingbird. Thanks to the successful film version of the book (1962), the character is strongly associated with actor Gregory Peck, who won an Oscar as Finch and earned a place in American cinema as an all-time favorite hero. Set in a small town in Alabama in the 1930s, the novel is the story of the young girl Scout, her brother Jem and their widowed father, Atticus, a small-town attorney respected for his honesty and intelligence. Part of the novel centers around a court case in which Atticus defends a black man accused of raping a white woman. Along the way Atticus helps downtrodden neighbors, fends off a lynch mob, saves the day with surprisingly expert marksmanship and preaches justice with a quiet but forceful integrity. Atticus Finch is a lock on anyone's list of favorite fictional lawyers (and probably favorite dads); in 1997 the Alabama State Bar erected a monument in his honor in Monroeville, Alabama, the home of novelist Lee.
Extra credit:
Harper Lee has said Atticus Finch was based on her father, Amasa Coleman Lee.
