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  1. Jameson had his point where everything wasn't a game to him during the timeline, and that made him balanced and likeable. He was cool and he was smart and he had his ways. He got along with Avery like a glove. But none of that showed in the 4th book, he was so one dimensional it hurt to read his chapters.

  2. Mr. Avery. An older and cantankerous neighbor who lives across the street from the Finches. He’s a portly man who whittles, though only to make himself toothpicks. Scout, Jem, and Dill find Mr. Avery fascinating since in the summers, he puts on a nightly show of sitting on his porch and sneezing—and one night, they caught him urinating an ...

  3. Overall, Mr. Avery is a multi-dimensional character who, albeit minor, enriches the narrative landscape of Lee's novel. Through his portrayals and connections to broader social issues, he helps to paint a complex picture of life in the American South during the 1930s, making him a character worthy of deeper analysis in the context of the story's themes and character development.

  4. Mr. Avery shows his courage when he goes to the second floor of Miss Maudie's house during the fire and pushes furniture out of the window. He almost gets stuck up there, but he reveals that he is ...

  5. Mr. Avery is a boarder at a house in Atticus Finch's neighborhood. Getty. In Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird," the character of Atticus Finch is heroic: He defends an African-American man in a no-win case in the deep South, he treats everyone respectfully, he teaches his children compassion and patience, and he protects his town from ...

    • Susan Sherwood
  6. Summary. Analysis. Atticus allows Jem and Scout to go sit by Miss Rachel ’s fish pool with Dill the night before he leaves. They look for Mr. Avery, who lives across the street from Mrs. Dubose and whom they once watched urinate an impressive distance. Dill casually suggests they go for a walk, something nobody does in Maycomb.

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  8. Summary: Chapter 7. A few days later, after school has begun for the year, Jem tells Scout that he found the pants mysteriously mended and hung neatly over the fence. When they come home from school that day, they find another present hidden in the knothole: a ball of gray twine. They leave it there for a few days, but no one takes it, so they ...

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