English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

an anti-government statement.
a novel for children.
his last novel.
a play.

2006-09-30 16:05:56 · 3 answers · asked by iluvhipos 3 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

3 answers

Um...none of the above, actually. It was explicitly not for children, unlike Tom Sawyer. It wasn't "anti-government" per se, but in many ways it was an ti-American, specifically the Americean "can-do" types that Tom Sawyer epitomizes in the novel.

It was also anti-govenment in that it was, of course, brutally anti-slavery. Huck's crisi of conscience can be read as a vicious satire of America's constitutional principles.

2006-10-01 23:07:38 · answer #1 · answered by erikswanson99 2 · 1 0

i think of that could desire to be advantageous in an "abridged" version specially for sons and daughters finished with colourful photos, and then the authentic textual content cloth will continuously be available for human beings that are able to greater state-of-the-artwork thinking and historic perspective. those words are very distracting from the story line at this factor, and desire clarification, and optimistically the guy listening to the reason has the adulthood to comprehend, finished with a biography of Mark Twain/Samuel Clemens himself and his observations approximately slavery and human nature and why he replace into compelled to paint the image that he painted in Huckleberry Finn. Humanizing human beings is a huge feat.

2016-12-12 18:14:00 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

multiple guess ?? i know it to be the next book after tom sawyer but thats all

2006-09-30 16:14:31 · answer #3 · answered by coscho 1 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers