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Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Oxford Mark Twain)

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Oxford Mark Twain)

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $13.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Huckleberry Finn is fun!!
Review: Hello Fellow Readers!!!

You should read Huckleberry Finn if you enjoy excitement, adventure, fun, and reading! It's all of this and a bit of Tom Sawyer mixed into one novel by Mark Twain.

The adventures begin when Huck leaves his guardian, the widow, and takes a raft on the Mississipi, where he meets up with a slave named Jim. Jim and Huck haves lots of fun.

It's really exciting for the younger generation due to how they are just boys and they have these great adventures. The writing is a bit hard to get used to due to how phentic everything is. Also, it shows how living in the past was, and how simple everything was.

The book is quite excellent, and I enjoyed it very much. I give it an A+ because it is written is darn well. If you like books, you'll like this one.

-Stevey

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A flawed, but powerful, masterpiece
Review: Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" holds a rightful place as one of the enduring monuments of United States literature. It's also a book that continues to be both entertaining and controversial (two qualities that not all "classics" have). I must admit: as much as I admire and am enriched by this novel, I also find its final chapters to be not wholly satisfying.

Twain is brilliant in that the heroes of this book, set in the pre-Civil War American South, are two of the most marginalized members of that society: Huck, a poor white boy whose single parent is an abusive alcoholic father; and Jim, an escaped African-American slave. Their relationship is beautifully written; Twain's vision of an interracial friendship is a significant milestone in U.S. literature, and is comparable to such relationships in Cooper's "Last of the Mohicans" and Melville's "Moby Dick." Twain depicts Jim as a master of African-American folk traditions.

Twain evokes the vernacular speech of the American south; this literary technique has been continued by generations of U.S. writers, both black and white. Twain's merry riffs on Shakespeare are also worthy of note. I also continue to be fascinated by Twain's analysis of the twisted interrelationship among racism, institutional Christianity, and oppressive biblical interpretation.

In my opinion, the novel's weak link is the plot material revolving around Huck's pal Tom Sawyer. Tom is a wonderful character, but his antics seem out of place in the structure of the narrative, and ultimately cheapen the arc of the story. Despite its problematic aspects, however, "Huckleberry Finn" is one of the truly indispensable classics of the American canon. It is a crucial junction in a literary tapestry that immediately encompasses such works as "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass," Alice Walker's "The Color Purple," and many other great books. If you haven't yet read Huck Finn, put aside any preconceptions you might have and discover the book for yourself; if you've already read it, read it again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mark Twain's wonderful book
Review: As a general reader, I recommend this book to everyone. It would be the best for those people who love adventure books and the sense of escaping pathway. By using vivid descriptive langue, the author successfully guide his readers through some very beautiful landscapes and dangerous situations. Readers not only could see themselves following the two main characters through their difficult journey, but also could move with them toward their destination, Freedom of Slavery.
This was a required book in my 11th grade. Just by looking at it, I already felt sleepy. When I began to read the first pages, I felt worse. I did not understand one thing. The reason for it was, I did not read the book "The adventures of Tom Sawyer." The first couple pages in Huckleberry Finn is like the second part of Tom Sawyer. After that, the story getting more interesting and there is no more confusing , I was so into it. I finish it with the fastest reading rate ever.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The advenger of Huckleberry Finn
Review: Huckleberry Finn was a story about a boy who was an orfan. He lived with a widow and his father was not very nice to him .One day he snuck out of his house and ran away andfound a firend. I thought this was a good book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Surprising
Review: As a young child, I had tried to read Huck Finn, and being a girl, was totally bored with it. Recently, however, my English class required me to read it and I was wonderfully surprised. This book actually had a meaning! It wasn't just an adventure tale. It was about racism, equality, reality, and I enjoyed it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dick Hill Book on Tape edition
Review: I ordered this so I wouldn't have to read the entire book aloud to my class, and they wouldn't have to read it aloud either. You have to have a balance control on your tape player, or no dice. I don't have a balance control, so I had to unplug first the left and then the right speaker to listen to this. That's the only way they could get the entire novel onto four tapes! Mr. Hill reads a lot slower than I do, for effect I guess, so we won't listen to this much. Maybe just when I am sick of reading aloud! But it is nice to have so when I need a substitute, he or she can just pop the tape in and not have to worry about covering the reading for that day.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Little Short Of Excellent
Review: This book gives you a whole new perspective of the world and civilization. It is very unique. It got a bit confusing at some parts, that is why it is not a 5. Mark Twain did an excellent job of portraying this particular time in history. He was very enlightening and subtle in how he wrote the metaphors. This book will have you thinking for a while. However, take your time in reading it. It is important to understand every well written word

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Racist literature? no WAY!
Review: I can never understand why some people consider "Huckleberry Finn" to be a racist novel. It had the exact opposite effect on me.

I read this book when I was about 13 years old. Being brought up in a lilly-white suburb, I was a blatant racist. I had no direct contact with black people; I only knew what I heard from friends. Reading "Huckleberry Finn" made me understand the historical prejudices that people had against black people and how it held them back. It turned my views on blacks completely around, and I still vividly remember the arguments I had with my friends about race after I read this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Adventures in Life
Review: Devoid of a mother, unloved and ignored by his father, and best friend and sidekick to a man whose skin color is reason enough for a lynching. "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," by Mark Twain, is about a boy set on living his life free of hassles. That, however, is not what he gets as a feigns his own death in order to escape his drunken old man, and meets up with another disregarded soul, a runaway slave who becomes his only steady friend. Together they high-tail it down the Mississippi river on a make-shift raft, narrowly escaping death, thievery, and capture from a variety of southern folk. Their experiences serve as true examples of adventure, as both discover that there is more to their character and souls that what they had ever imagined. They develop a sense of courage, acceptance, and happiness as they float their way to freedom, knowing that water always finds its way, and by following it they will too.

The story of Huck shows the growth and molding of identities of both Huck and his companion Jim, with the use of eloquent diction. Twain writes in the typical language of the time period and exercises the slang and frank use of words that would be ever so appropriate of the homeless waif and runaway slave. This use of the literary device enhances Twain's theme by speaking a pure American dialect in order to paint a picture of one of the most piercing images of the devastation slavery had on those enslaved as well as the society that allowed such an act to take place. The controversial topic and writing technique which Twain uses, succeeds in relaying to the readers what his purpose was in writing the great American novel: that existence and the participation in it is short and measured, sometimes by others, but mostly by actions of the individuals themselves. Therefore, it must be taken as a continual learning process, with which understanding and growth are a byproduct to the daily highs and lows of what is known as life.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn By Mark Twain
Review: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a great book to read. It contains good literal context of what is happening around the late 1880's, which was around the time the book was published. At that time, slavery was not completely abolished and the author, Mark Twain had made a great illustration by having to hide Jim, who was a slave, when he and Huck were on their adventure. Where they had travel through the heart of America. Mark Twain also makes good little adventures that Jim and Huck run into. They go through the story going from one adventure after another, in the same time they also learn to bond as friends depsite the color of their skin. This is interesting for readers because it was rare to see blacks and whites talk to one another or let alone to even do things together. Though this book uses a derogatory word for African American, I do not find this inappropriate because during the time this book was written, this word was how people looked at African Americans. Mark Twain seems to display the social injustices that were happening America, and instead of following them he turned them around and made the bad seem good. I would recommend this book because a lot of children and maybe even adults could learn how life was like in the past and how there were social injustices. It can also show the meaning of how people can bond, regardless of his or her race, sex, or age. I think highly of this book even though it used to be banned in educational systems because of it's context and I think that this is one of the best books I have read in my life.


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