Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: Difference between revisions

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* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Lampshaded in the famous opening paragraph.
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Lampshaded in the famous opening paragraph.
* [[Walking the Earth]]
* [[Walking the Earth]]
* [[Write What You Know]]: Twain incorporated many events from his own life and adventures on the Mississippi into the fictional narrative. Two of the best examples are Colonel Sherburn's killing of Boggs and Huck finding the runaway Jim on the island, both of which were based on things that Twain actually witnessed firsthand. Both of these incidents were worse in [[Real Life]], however. The [[Expy]] of Colonel Sherburn was acquitted on self-defense charges, and the slave Twain found on the island had been tortured to death by slavehunters and left to rot.<ref>In case any of you are interested in traveling, St. Petersburg is Hannibal, MO, where you can camp outside of the cave and buy passage on a boat that will take you right past 'Jackson's Island' (making it easier to find later). 'Cardiff Hill' has a lighthouse on it. Be warned, however: the town ''knows'' that Mark Twain is its selling point, and they are capitalizing on it.</ref>
* [[Write Who You Know]]: Most of the townsfolk in St. Petersburg are based on members of Twain's family and his childhood friends from Hannibal, Missouri. Huck and Jim themselves are [[Expy|Expys]] of the son of the town drunk and a slave Twain's uncle owned.
* [[Wrong Genre Savvy]]: Tom Sawyer, who, among other things, insists that Jim tunnel out of his prison with a spoon rather than unlocking the door and walking out.
* [[Wrong Genre Savvy]]: Tom Sawyer, who, among other things, insists that Jim tunnel out of his prison with a spoon rather than unlocking the door and walking out.
* [[You Can't Go Home Again]]: At the end, Huck reunites with Tom and returns to childlike scheming, just to drive home that it's time to get past all that.
* [[You Can't Go Home Again]]: At the end, Huck reunites with Tom and returns to childlike scheming, just to drive home that it's time to get past all that.