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Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is written by the talented author, Mark Twain. The genre of this book is humour, adventure, action and fiction. The main settings of this book are in St. Petersburg, Missouri and the Mississippi River in Missouri, Illinois and Arkansas around the time periods of the 1830’s and 40’s. Mark Twain chose St. Petersburg and Mississippi as the main settings because the main character, Huckleberry Finn, lives in those areas.

Huckleberry Finn is the main character of the story and plays the role as himself; telling the story in his point of view. Other vital characters includes: Tom Sawyer, Widow Douglass, Miss Watson, Jim, Pap Finn, Judge Thatcher, The Grangerfords, Silas Phelps, Sally Phelps and Aunt Polly. Huckleberry Finn which goes by the nickname Huck is a thirteen year old boy who resides near the Mississippi River in Missouri. Huck is the son of Pap Finn. Widow Douglass and Miss Watson are two wealthy sisters who adopted Huck. Huck is loyal, cheerful, down-to-earth, and fair-minded. An example of his good trait is that he is caring because he said a line in the story in which he said that he would rather end up in hell as long he can keep his friend Jim out of slavery. An example of his bad trait is that he is good in deceiving people. …show more content…

I think that Huck’s main goal is to keep Jim away from slavery. The reason why he does this is that he cares for Jim so much. The antagonist of the story is the society and the laws; ironically Huck and Jim are part of society. The climax was at its highest when Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer freed Jim from slavery, and when Tom got a bullet wound due to a gun shot in his leg; he tells Huck the Miss Watson, with her will, freed Huckleberry

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