The Adventures of Tom Sawyer & Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

English language

Published Nov. 3, 2002

ISBN:
978-0-451-52864-3
Copied ISBN!

View on Inventaire

The adventures and pranks of a mischievous boy growing up in a Mississippi River town in the early nineteenth century. Winner of the 1967 Lewis Carroll Shelf Award

97 editions

A product of its time, which isn't an excuse

No rating

I kind of have two reviews of this book. On the one hand, I now understand why it's a classic. Twain was a great observer of his peers and an even better writer. It's not a book for kids, at least not contemporary ones, but setting aside the things I'm about to complain about it's a great read about childhood for adults.

On the other, it's also very clear to me why many people don't want to read this book and particularly want it taken out of curricula. It's not just the N-word, though that's all over the place. Personally I was much more troubled by the attitudes through the book.

The worst part by far is Twain's treatment of the one indigenous character, "Injun Joe". The story needs an antagonist, and the cartoonishness of Joe and his crimes seem like an OK fit. But why make him …

avatar for melanderland

rated it

avatar for Orlion

rated it

avatar for radio_appears

rated it

avatar for MaidMerry

rated it

avatar for neontapir

rated it

avatar for mjeaton

rated it

avatar for iconoclast@bookrastinating.com

rated it

avatar for masyukun

rated it

avatar for secretGeek

rated it

avatar for memorysnow

rated it

avatar for liambean

rated it

avatar for ana

rated it

avatar for SpaceCamel

rated it

avatar for h_tejas

rated it

avatar for lovmelovmycats

rated it

avatar for Seedling

rated it

avatar for dezdono

rated it

avatar for acaleyn@bookwyrm.social

rated it

avatar for harmonicstarofjustice

rated it

avatar for greynotgrey

rated it

avatar for oracle_of_the_void

rated it

avatar for chrisandrews

rated it

avatar for scienced

rated it