Thursday, April 23, 2020
The San Francisco Chronicle Pronounced Mark Twains Adventures Of Essay
  "The San Francisco Chronicle" pronounced Mark Twain's Adventures of    Huckleberry Finn his most notable and well written books. The Mississippi region is  far better depicted in this novel than in his earlier Life on the Mississippi. An  accurate account is made of the lifestyle and times of the Southwest nearly fifty  years prior to the construction of the novel.    Twain does a remarkable job enticing the reader into the adventures of two  boys, Huck and Tom, and a runaway Negro, Jim, while also covertly implanting his  messages and morals in the text. The most pleasing parts of the story are those Twain  describes in detail. Detail is also exceptionally displayed in the illustrations he  paints of the characters. Pap, Huck's father, is one of the prime examples. Twain has  the ability to create a portrait in short sketches as well as long. It is this ability that  pulls the reader into the great American story.    Along with detail and concise character depiction, Twain intertwines humor.    The Duke and the King contribute to some of the most amusing humor throughout  the course of their "work" trying to imitate heirs of the late Peter Wilks. It is "fertility  and luck" that salvage them from exposure. It is all the close calls of near discovery  from each character's fraud that moves the story along. With out the suspense the  plot would be dull.    Every person who endulges in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn will  commend the story as exceptional literature. The humor and precise depiction of the  time, life, place, and people will all contribute to this conclusion. The story is "well  gotten up" and "fun."    
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