Adventures of Huckleberry Finn With Reader's Guide (Amsco Literature Program Series Grade 7 12, R 120 ALP)
by Mark Twain
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| Long time ago and far from here... | 11 | 24 | 07/26/2008 06:16AM |
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Read in March, 2008
So - this review is just a whole bunch of my thoughts about The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The first two paragraphs are somewhat cohesive, and the third paragraph sort-of means what I want it to,and there are definitley parts of it that could have been explained better, but from there...its just a mess of my thoughts. So anyway,I'm just warning you.
I had to read The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn for school, and i really hated reading it. In fact, I didn't even read some of it - I look...more
I had to read The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn for school, and i really hated reading it. In fact, I didn't even read some of it - I look...more
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Read in December, 2007
I've never read much of Mark Twain's stuff. I vaguely remember reading A Conneticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court in college and I think I was probably SUPPOSED to read The Adventures of Tom Sawyer at some point in school, but this was the first time I had ever picked up what's supposed to be his greatest work, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I wish I had done so sooner, because it was great.
If you're somehow unfamiliar with the basic premise, Huckleberry Finn follows the adventures of the e...more
If you're somehow unfamiliar with the basic premise, Huckleberry Finn follows the adventures of the e...more
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Read in June, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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recommends it for:
folks into race relations, scathing social comentary, or a well told story about unlikely friends
Both Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn give me pleasant memories of my grandma. She took me to Hannibal, Misouri to see the touristy stuff there from Mark Twain's childhood that inspired the book. The cave was most exciting, I love caves and bats. That was my first cave.
I also fondly remember my dad playing the old fence painting trick on me as a kid. There is a really cute picture somewhere of me, about 5 yrs old, in "Hee-Haw" (from the TV show of same name) overalls joyfully painting the...more
I also fondly remember my dad playing the old fence painting trick on me as a kid. There is a really cute picture somewhere of me, about 5 yrs old, in "Hee-Haw" (from the TV show of same name) overalls joyfully painting the...more
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Read in January, 2006
How does one go until age 28 before reading this? I have no idea--but I was delighted WAY beyond expectation and learned so much when I read this and taught it to my students.
Tom Sawyer was Twain's children’s "adult" book with no real social message; Huck Finn was his adult "children's" book, therefore--I enjoyed it much more than Tom Sawyer. Rich with social awareness, it was fascinating (especially, and it's a must) to read the Norton Critical Edition of the book whic...more
Tom Sawyer was Twain's children’s "adult" book with no real social message; Huck Finn was his adult "children's" book, therefore--I enjoyed it much more than Tom Sawyer. Rich with social awareness, it was fascinating (especially, and it's a must) to read the Norton Critical Edition of the book whic...more
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Read in January, 2008
Now, I'm not normally a fan of dialect, but I tell you, Mark Twain has given a fine example of the right way to do it. He is consistent in the spellings of the different words he uses and shows different ways of speaking for each of the characters. That is, they don't all sound alike. So it feels authentic. I really like that aspect. The language that Twain uses for Huck Finn's voice is absolutely delicious. It's so rich and wonderful you can cut it with a knife. He keeps up the quality of his m...more
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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, is about a young boy, Huck, in search of freedom and adventure. The shores of the Mississippi River provide the backdrop for the entire book.
Huck is kidnapped by Pap, his drunken father. Pap kidnaps Huck because he wants Huck's $6000. Huck was awarded $6000 from the treasure he and Tom Sawyer found in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Huck finally escapes from the deserted house in the woods and finds a canoe to shove off down the river. Instead o...more
Huck is kidnapped by Pap, his drunken father. Pap kidnaps Huck because he wants Huck's $6000. Huck was awarded $6000 from the treasure he and Tom Sawyer found in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Huck finally escapes from the deserted house in the woods and finds a canoe to shove off down the river. Instead o...more
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Read in February, 2008
Huckleberry Finn reads better than Tom Sawyer--perhaps reflecting Twain's growing maturity as a writer. It's an excellent yarn of Huck's travels along the Mississippi and his fallings-in with escaped slave Jim, a couple of hucksters known as "the king" and "the duke", and, finally, with Tom Sawyer his own self. The mood of the book changes when Tom comes along, and I think it helps here to have read Tom Sawyer first. Up until he appears, passing himself off as his brother ...more
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Read in January, 2005
Hadn’t read this wonderful book in a couple of decades, though I used to read it every few years. The book begs to be read aloud. The dialect sings with natural beauty. The descriptions of the Mississippi, small town life and the rural landscape are poetry. The humor is stand-up comic funny and so skillful you admire the jokes with the same wonder you admire the descriptions of storms on the river, which is as if you were witnessing them, rather than reading about them. And there isn’t a bet...more
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Read in December, 2007
I've always heard people talking about huckleberry finn but never knew what it was. One day I was in the library with nothing to read and saw it on the selves so I took it and read it.
At first I wasn't too hard to understand and I got most of what it was saying but then language and meaning started to become complicated. Especially when a slave spoke it was hard to comprehend what he was trying to say. I also noticed the similarities between the way the slaves spoke and the way slang is tod...more
At first I wasn't too hard to understand and I got most of what it was saying but then language and meaning started to become complicated. Especially when a slave spoke it was hard to comprehend what he was trying to say. I also noticed the similarities between the way the slaves spoke and the way slang is tod...more
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Read in July, 2008
My school has several copies of this version of Huck Finn. I read it so I have a better understanding of if this version is a suitable replacement of the original for my struggling readers.
Depending on your purpose for reading the book, this is either an excellent or a poor adaption. If you are looking for an easy to read adventure story, then it is a good adaption. But if you are interested in anything else, then this version is not the one to use. First, the language has been c...more
Depending on your purpose for reading the book, this is either an excellent or a poor adaption. If you are looking for an easy to read adventure story, then it is a good adaption. But if you are interested in anything else, then this version is not the one to use. First, the language has been c...more
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Read in February, 2000
For a book that's supposedly the source of "all modern American literature," there's a lot you can pick on. Like the careening plot, or the last ten chapters of the book (which is kind of like eating Sour Patch Kids after a chocolate souffle). I can just see Mark Twain paging anxiously through the first thirty-one chapters and muttering, "I can't take any more of this literary merit--if I don't bring in Tom Sawyer to screw things up, I'm going to have a freaking aneurysm."
...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone who recognizes the word "Missouri"
Interestingly enough, John Seeyle, who wrote the introduction to this edition, says, The Adventrues of Huckleberry Finn is one of those books everyone knows, even if everyone has not read it." And I realized this is so true. This is one of those books that when I picked it up, I was not sure if I had read it. (Sometimes I do forget that I have read books.) While reading it, I parts of it were definitely familiar; I had either read excerpts of the book at some point, or I had started it ...more
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Read in August, 2008
This book works amazingly well alongside TOM SAWYER. It's great to see the way Twain uses the two characters, Tom and Huck, to explore the ethical implications of point of view within a narrative. Tom believes, selfishly, in a third person narrator that has chosen him as its hero; as such, history and legend collude to glorify Tom. This is why and how he hijacks Huck's narrative in the last fifth or so of HUCK: he converts Huck and Jim into mere accomplices within his third person narrative o...more
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Read in June, 2007
finally read this in preparation for reading "Finn," the recent book about Huck's drunken father. I really enjoyed it, but skimmed the tom sawyer section in the end, just seemed pointless whereas the rest of the book's antics had lots to say about society. that, or i just wanted to see if Jim is set free. i'm sure lots of books have been written about the racism in the book. it made me cringe. but it was also very interesting to witness huck's moral quandaries about what society was t...more
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Read in January, 2008
My interest in Huck Finn isn't so much about the story (which is fairly plodding and uninteresting) as it is about the characters and the discussions their adventures encourage. Huck's moral dilemma (is helping a slave escape a good thing or a bad thing?) is fabulously interesting, though it doesn't get nearly the page time it deserves. The darkness of Huck's and Jim's lives is off-set by their growing fondness for each other as well as their recognition that "civilization" isn't so c...more
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Read in January, 2008
I "read" this book on audiobook, which is a relatively new experience for me. However, for this particular novel, I found it quite satisfying in that the performer (Garrick Hagon) articulated the various dialects quite well, and thus the language was able to flow something like Twain would've likely wanted, rather than being an antiquated piece of controversy. It felt something akin to the difference between reading Shakespeare and hearing his plays performed.
This novel has almos...more
This novel has almos...more
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This was an interesting novel to read because of the unique relationship between Huck and Jim, and the growth of Huck as an individual. Huck’s friendship with Jim was not a socially acceptable one, but as Huck matures throughout the novel, he realizes that what society has taught him is not necessarily right, and that being “sivilized” is not necessarily the best way for him to live his life. Huck becomes friends with Jim, who also acts as a fatherly figure, being a more positive example t...more
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