Tharindu Dissanayake's Reviews > The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
by
by

"Yes; en I's rich now, come to look at it. I owns mysef, en I's wuth eight hund'd dollars. I wish I had de money, I wouldn't want no mo'."
Though this book is might have the appearance of the second book to the Adventure's of Tom Sawyer, it is not at all similar. Tom Sawyer was a simple, fun-filled story covering a brief series of events where as this is a much heavier work in almost every aspect. Aside from having certain shared characters, reader will find no find other similarity.
However, what you will find, is the long, hard and adventurous journey of Huck and Jim, highlighting many aspects of a slavery and the social aspects at the time. If you start reading this, expecting a continuation to Tom Sawyer, you'd be pleasantly surprised instead of disappointed, giving you a very different kind of entertainment.
Though this book is might have the appearance of the second book to the Adventure's of Tom Sawyer, it is not at all similar. Tom Sawyer was a simple, fun-filled story covering a brief series of events where as this is a much heavier work in almost every aspect. Aside from having certain shared characters, reader will find no find other similarity.
However, what you will find, is the long, hard and adventurous journey of Huck and Jim, highlighting many aspects of a slavery and the social aspects at the time. If you start reading this, expecting a continuation to Tom Sawyer, you'd be pleasantly surprised instead of disappointed, giving you a very different kind of entertainment.
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Reading Progress
June 19, 2020
–
Started Reading
June 19, 2020
–
1.0%
June 19, 2020
– Shelved
June 20, 2020
–
Finished Reading
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I loved reading this aloud with my ~10-12 year old son about 10-12 years ago. One of my happiest parenting memories."
I'm thinking about giving this one a re-read for a while now. To be honest, coming from Tom Sawyer, I was only looking mostly for humor with Huck. It took me a while to figure out that this is a different thing entirely.

Although, there was some serious stuff in Tom Sawyer, but just put across in a very subversive way.
But Twain kinda made up for the earlier lighter work in Huck Finn by making the Tom Sawyer character look WAY too frivolous - DANGEROUSLY so in Huck Finn. The Tom Sawyer character acted very uncaring in Huck Finn, regarding Jim's safety and freedom.


That's interesting. I have never listened to an audio book actually. Feels a little slower compared to reading. But never thought different accents making it interesting.

I have listened to many audio books and they can be excellent.
For Example:
The Harry Potter series for instance, narrated by actor Jim Dale - WOW!!!
Red Rising series by Tim Gerard Reynolds - fantastic.
so many other greats too.
Clarence Thomas autobiography read by himself - tremendous.
Even many of the free versions read by volunteer/amatures can be good. Try this site:
Or many of the books by Mises at Mises.org

I have listened to many audio books and they can be excellent.
many of the books by Mises at Mises.org
The Harry Potter series for instan..."
Thank you for the link. I'm going to try one for a change and see how it'll work out.

Yeah. Tom was more of a children's book whereas Huck's story is much more deep.


Thank you, Zoe! 😊

“All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn. American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing as good since.�
� Hemingway, Ernest
I loved reading this aloud with my ~10-12 year old son about 10-12 years ago. One of my happiest parenting memories.