Unfortunately I was never able to find the location myself. All it tells you in the book was that her house was next door. I even tried using context clues later in the book to find out if her house was south of the Finch's or North. I couldn't even find that.
Miss Rachel's house in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is described as a tidy, White House with muscadine vines growing on the porch. It is located next to the Finch family home and serves as the residence of Dill's aunt during his visits to Maycomb.
Mrs. Dubose lives on the same street as the Finch's. This street is given no name, but we are told that it is "the main residential street in town" (page 6). She lives just down the street from the Finch's.
beside the Finches
Most of his description is in Ch 16.
It was Mr. Cunningham's son. It was lunch and not dinner. It is To Kill A Mockingbird. There is no How in the title.
Miss Maudie's house is the one that catches fire in "To Kill a Mockingbird," not the protagonist's.
Boo Radley
it represents jem's childhood
There was no phantom in To Kill A Mockingbird.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," it was Miss Maudie's house that was burglarized. She was one of the Finch family's neighbors in Maycomb.
its "boarded across the street from Mrs. Lafayette Dubose's house."
Mayella Ewell gets stuck in the window during the fire at the Ewell house in "To Kill a Mockingbird."
Mrs.Radley dies of natural causes in the winter in chapter 8 of To Kill a Mockingbird.
The description of the Ewell house in "To Kill a Mockingbird" as run-down, dirty, and lacking basic necessities like food and hygiene reflects the poverty and neglect the Ewell family lives in. This characterization helps convey their social status, living conditions, and values within the community.
In Chapter 8 of "To Kill a Mockingbird," Scout describes how the children find a "Secret First Purchase" that includes a scuppernong arbor. The word "scuppernongs" is explicitly mentioned in this description.