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Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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Huckleberry Finn The book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, written by Mark Twain, about a young boy by the name of Huck Finn who lives his life in the book learning and adventuring everyday while growing up in Missouri. As the story goes on it goes with Huck and Jim floating down the Mississippi River on the raft they had previously stole. Throughout the book, Huck learns new things and new ways to live life by manly people he sees along the journey he leads on with Jim. Huckleberry Finn was raised in a broken household, his father was the town drunk and his mother had died when he was young. Huck had no adults or people in general to look out for the young boy. Huck was living what life many teenage boys wanted to live. He had no parent to yell at him or to give him chores to do. Then, the open free life ended quick, widow Douglas and Miss Watson things began to change relatively quickly. Widow Douglas and Miss Watson one two older women and their goal raising …show more content…

They saw each other Huck showing up at Jackson’s Island Jim ran away because he was listening in on people talking about him being sold in New Orleans. Huck feels very close and safe with Jim. Huck and Jim decide to float the Mississippi. Huck feels protected by but not told what or what not to do, so he can still be free and safe at the same time. Jim is Huck’s friend now, but unlike Tom, Jim is trustful and truthful. He befriends Huck like Tom did but does not have to prove anything to Huck unlike Tim. Jim also poses as a dad like adult that cares about his health but will let him roam the lands like Pap. Huck finally found his perfect way of living hi young life. In The Adventures of Huck Finn, there are many outer lying forces, all which all pushing Huck away from his true self. Examples like the women teaching proper education, responsibility, and Pap telling him the polar opposite is right, that slavery is right and should be

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