Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (version 7)

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (version 7)
Fleeing his drunken father and the constraints of civilized society, a teenage boy lights out for the territories with Jim, an escaped slave. Down the Mississippi River on a makeshift raft, Mark Twain crafted something that still sparks arguments about race, freedom, and what it means to do right. Huck Finn tells his story in a voice so natural it feels invented, full of lies that reveal more truth than the saints around him. The novel isn't a simple abolitionist tract; it's complicated, sometimes wrongheaded, and often uncomfortably funny. Huck must choose between the rules he's been taught and the man he meets in the darkness of night, floating toward a freedom that might not exist anywhere on land. More than a century later, this book still makes readers squirm, argue, and wonder what they'd do in his place.
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