About   C-SPAN Video Library   Portrait Gallery   Classroom

About this
web site
American Writers: a journey through history is a permanent archive for educators, researchers and every one interested in the writers featured in the  C‑SPAN series.



IV

  

  

  


Novel by Mark Twain, published in 1884. Huckleberry Finn, the young narrator, runs away from his appalling father and, with his companion, the runaway slave Jim, makes a long and frequently interrupted voyage down
Works of Mark Twain
the Mississippi River on a raft. During the journey Huck encounters a variety of characters—notably the two con men who call themselves the King and the Duke—and types representing almost every class living on or along the river. A thread of cruelty runs through adventure after adventure, showing itself both in individuals' acts and in unthinking acceptance of such social institutions as slavery,
Read the Work
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
and Huck's natural goodness—which leads to his gradual overcoming his own racial prejudices and learning to love and respect Jim—is continually contrasted with the effects of a corrupt society. Idyllic descriptions of the great river abound, and Huck's good nature and unconscious humor permeate the whole.

Websites about the work
Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn: Text, Illustrations, and Early Reviews
Mark Twain In His Times
Mark Twain at Large: His Travels Here and Abroad

I   II   III   IV   V   VI   VII   VIII


C-SPAN.org    Book TV.org    Booknotes.org    Capitol Hearings.org
American Presidents.org    C-SPAN Alert!    Contact Us