This year, African-American and Mark Twain's Huckleberry Fin is one of the most popular books in American literature since the publication of Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn. This difference is mostly popular among Americans, and it is thought that various types of people in the United States continue to find it in a different way. It is described as everything from anti-south to anti-black, it is called everything from garbage to national treasure.
In 1935, Ernesto Hemingway said, "All modern American literature is called Mark Twain's book" Huckleberry Fin ". Mark Twain's "Adventure of Huckleberry Finn" is not just a symbolic American novel. This book is a book that defines all American novels. The plot of this American novel is filled with the concept of American spirit and American dream. Mark Twain did a wonderful job with a little boy named Huckleberry Finn to express the spirit of America. Huckleberry Finn is an adventurous boy who shapes the future by removing lifestyles that are not suitable for him. American dream? If you do not like where you are and what you are doing, believe that you have the ability to shape your destiny, change it. Nobody has stopped you
American writer Mark Twain was one of the most influential people in his era. Twain 's most famous is the traditional classic "adventure of Huckleberry Finn", a novel about an adventure boy novel called Huck Finn crossing the Mississippi River. In the first impression, Huckleberry Finn was thought to be just a child's story written by creative Mark Twain. Regardless of how you describe, there is no doubt that Twain contains personal accounts.
For decades after Twain's death in 1910, Huckleberry Fin's adventure won the masterpiece status. Novelist Ernest Hemingway said, "All contemporary American literature was written by Mark Twain's book 'Huckleberry Finn', American poet TS Eliot and African American novelist Ralph Ellison I participated in the tribute of. It is increasingly being studied at the high school and university level, and its literary value and insights of the American society are highly appreciated. In particular, some people think Twain's satire is a powerful attack against racial discrimination.