Thursday, February 1, 1996

The 306 Greatest Books #3 - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

I am going back and posting all of my previous book reviews so that they are listed on my site in chronological order. The reviews are dated for the time when I read the book, hence the reason many of them will be listed for times before this website existed. 

The next up on my reading of the 306 greatest books is The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain. This book can be found on the SybervisionNorwegian, Observer, and the Zane Top 10 Book Lists.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is one of the primary books known both for being a school age required reading book and also one of the essential "banned books". I had read this while in school and have gone back to the book some thirty-years later. I can see the importance of this work, especially at the time. The book was written shortly after the conclusion of the Civil War, a time while our country was still healing and learning how to move on, however the book itself is set sometime before the war. Slavery is still very prevalent but the feelings on slavery could be felt to start shifting within the novel. And we see this shift most aptly in the character of Huck Finn. He goes from someone who is set out to do the right thing, to realizing that maybe the actual right thing to do isn't what is considered right by society. It is a startling change of theme from the more child fun-loving centric story from the previous novel, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, who also plays a pivotal role towards the end of Huck Finn. However, the character of Tom Sawyer truly is insufferable, and he ends up drawing out the conclusion of the story far longer than theoretically it should have gone. Huck Finn is also notoriously known for its prolific use of the "N word". And oh my word, I didn't realize until listening to it on audiobook, how truly prolific it was within the story. It is jarring to hear it now-a-days just thrown around so nonchalantly and it is rather disconcerting. Do I understand the contemporary usage of the word? Yes I do. Do I agree that even in this context it is still a degrading word to be used? Most definitely. It is this treatment of Black people within the book that makes this such a hard book to recommend but such an important book to study. While I do think that people should have read it, I can't in good conscious recommend it myself.