Student Essay 18902

Student Essay 18902

Morals/Ideas of Huck Finn Essay By:Keegan Williams Book Information: Full Name: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Author: Mark Twain Date of First Publishing: 1884 Publisher: Charles L. Webster&Co.

Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is a overall interesting book, full of plots, sub-plots, hidden ideas, and the amazing story of how one all important friendship can last throughout not only adversity, but racism itself. There are a few main characters, however, only two are truly the most important. The charasmatic Huckleberry Finn is always seeking truth, a young man trying to find out where his place in the world lies. Huck's main difference between this book, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer(1880), is that Huck has grown alot. The main indicator of this is that Huck made the decision to keep Jim safe from the authorities, and free him to see his family, using his own convictions and morals. This is a sign of his growing. Huck is always going and doing things the easiest way possible, which is the oppisite of his best friend, Tom Sawyer. The second main character, is Jim, the good-hearted, sometimes greedy black slave, who attempts to free himself so that not only that he can be free, but with his freedom, to buy back his seperated wife and child. Jim is overall less mannered due to his lack of education, quite superstitious, and is always had a thing for earning money. Now that the two main characters have been explained, its time to explain the main ideas, and morals of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Ideas of the Book: Main Theme: Satire Mark Twain himself is a very interesting author, and one of the main purposes of creating book, so it seems, is not only to show how horrible the slavery was, but...

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