Mark Twain created one of America's best-loved fictional characters when he wrote The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Using realistic language, Twain tells the story of two runaways—Huck Finn and the slave Jim—and their adventures down the Mississippi River on a raft. Though the story focuses on the humorous exploits of an imaginative adolescent, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885), told from the point of view of Huck, ultimately is concerned with deeper themes—man's inhumanity to man and the hypocrisy of conventional values.
- You Turn My Pages
- Available now
- New eBook additions
- New Kids additions
- New Teens additions
- Time for Family (and Relationships)
- Isn't it Bromantic?
- Expect the Unexpected
- Word on the Street
- The Comics and Graphic Novels of Neil Gaiman
- Hurray for Happy Hour!
- Hello Yellow
- The Adventures of Kamala Khan, Ms. Marvel
- See all
- You Turn My Pages
- Available now
- New Audiobooks
- New kids additions
- New Teens additions
- Most popular
- This Must Be a Sign
- Time for Family (and Relationships)
- Isn't it Bromantic?
- Expect the Unexpected
- Word on the Street
- Hurray for Happy Hour!
- Hello Yellow
- See all