

Will cause the purchasers of the book to read it, out of curiosity, instead of merely intending to do so. In a letter published in the Hartford Courant, the author responds gratefully, noting that “one book in a public library prevents the sale of a sure ten and a possible hundred of its mates.” Twain also notes that the library's newsworthy action This ban turned into a publicity coup for Twain and his book. Soon after it was published, the public library in Concord, Massachusetts, refused to carry The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn because of its perceived crudeness. publication 1885), it quickly became the most successful book Twain had yet written.

In a letter to his friend William Dean Howells in 1877 (quoted by biographer Ron Powers in Mark Twain: A Life), Twain confessed: “I like it only tolerably well, as far as I have got, & may possibly pigeonhole or burn the MS when it is done.” Fortunately, Twain did not burn the manuscript when it was published in England in 1884 (U.S. Although The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is very much a “boys' novel”-humorous, suspenseful, and intended purely as entertainment- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn also addresses weighty issues such as slavery, prejudice, hypocrisy, and morality.Īfter Twain finished writing the first half of the novel, he expressed doubts about the book's potential success. The book is a sequel to another of the author's successful adventure novels, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, originally published in 1876.


Twain also paints a rich portrait of the slave Jim, a character unequaled in American literature: he is guileless, rebellious, genuine, superstitious, warmhearted, ignorant, and astute all at the same time. Through satire, Twain skewers the somewhat unusual definitions of “right” and “wrong” in the antebellum (pre–Civil War) South, noting among other things that the “right” thing to do when a slave runs away is to turn him in, not help him escape. He encounters a runaway slave named Jim, and the two embark on a raft journey down the Mississippi River. Mark Twain's classic The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) is told from the point of view of Huck Finn, a barely literate teen who fakes his own death to escape his abusive, drunken father.
