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4 result(s) for "Slavery Juvenile fiction."
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The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
This isMark Twain's first novel about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, and it has become one of the world's best-loved books. It is a fond reminiscence of life in Hannibal, Missouri, an evocation of Mark Twain's own boyhood along the banks of the Mississippi during the 1840s. \"Most of the adventures recorded in this book really occurred, \" he tells us. The Mark Twain Library edition contains the only text since the first edition (1876) to be based directly on the author's manuscript and to include all of the \"200 rattling pictures' Mark Twain commissioned from one of his favorite illustrators, True W. Williams. This landmark anniversary edition contains a selection of original documents by Mark Twain, including several letters in his inimitable voice about writing Tom Sawyer and about its original publication.
Hard facts : setting and form in the American novel
American culture has often been described in terms of paradigmatic images--the wilderness, the Jeffersonian landscape of family farms, the great industrial cities at the turn of the 19th century. But underlying these cultural ideals are less happy paradoxes.
The Free Lance-Star, Fredericksburg, Va., Rob Hedelt column
Today, it leaves the couple with a home where the heart of the house dates back to Colonial days, other sections came along after World War II, and functional parts of the home are new and practical. [...] if that were not enough, there's an enclosed porch on the river side of the home where a warm evening glow lingers over the long grassy yard.