![]() ![]() ![]() Finally, Steve is proving to the jury that their judgment of Steve being guilty is wrong and that they need to listen to his side of the story first before judging. He soon realizes that proving to your own friends that you are worthy by breaking the law is not worth it and needs to listen to his own instincts instead of trying to be others. Furthermore, Steve is dealing with the consequence of proving to his friends that he is a “tough guy”. Steve handles the way people perceive him as a criminal by proving them wrong. ![]() At first, Steve goes through a questioning period where he questions if he is truly a monster and is a criminal like a prosecutor says he is. Steve Harmon deals with obstacles that have been thrown at him during his trial. Walter Dean Myers, the author of the novel Monster, touches upon the life of a character named Steve Harmon living in Harlem, as he is on trial and teaches us life lessons of self–perception, peer pressure, and judgment. ![]()
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