Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians Audiolibro Por Mark Twain, Lee Nelson arte de portada

Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians

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Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians

De: Mark Twain, Lee Nelson
Narrado por: Grover Gardner
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In 1885, while The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was becoming one of the best-selling American classics of modern times, Mark Twain began this sequel in which Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, and Jim head west on the trail of two white girls kidnapped by Sioux warriors.

Fifteen-thousand words into the work, Twain stopped in the middle of a sentence, never to go back. The unfinished story sat on dusty shelves for more than 100 years until author Lee Nelson decided to finish it. The result is a story of adventure, wit, and wisdom with listeners saying they can't tell where Twain leaves off and Nelson begins.

©2003 Lee Nelson; 1968 University of California Press, the Mark Twain Papers, and the Mark Twain Foundation (P)2003 Blackstone Audiobooks
Acción y Aventura Clásicos Género Ficción Westerns Ficción Nativo americano Aventura

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"Of the half-dozen recorded renditions I've auditioned, this is the one that best expresses the brilliance of Twain's rendering of dialect and a rural boy's sensibility." ( AudioFile)
Seamless Continuation • Historical Authenticity • Excellent Narration • Engaging Storyline • Complex Adult Themes

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Narration is excellent and brings you into the story. Flawless transition from the original text to Lee Nelson's continuation.
The story gets into a humourous view on the settling of the wild west, but still shows the harsh, unforgiving reality that it was. 10/10

Fantastic adventures and continuation

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This book was better than The Adventures of Huck Finn, which most consider to be Twain's masterpiece. I liked Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians more than any other Twain work. Even if you only read the 15,000 words that Twain wrote, which is roughly 25% of the book (two hours of listening pleasure), you will be amazed by Twain at his adult best. This is no juvenile fiction...like Twain's other works...Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Tom Sawyer Abroad, Tom Sawyer Detective, etc,..., . The book examines how each character grows and develops from the childish personalities exhibited in other books, into fully developed complex adults. Tom comes to realize that 'book' Indians in the adventure novels he has read, do not act like 'real' Indians in the real world, and 'book' women in his romanticized novels do not act like 'real' women. Like Don Quixote awakening from his fantasies, Tom comes to realize that he can't believe everything he reads in books, James Fennimore Cooper and Sir Walter Scott, being just some of the authors that Twain skewers. And Huck comes to realize how to rely on his own instinct for what's right and wrong, rather than be guided by the often intolerant and bigoted social morays of his time, . Even former slave Jim grows and develops an awareness of what being free really means, after living among the wild Indians and being treated like an equal for the first time in his life.

If you're expecting the same old juvenile, silly nonsense Twain usually put out, hold onto your seats when you read this one. Best book I've listened to on Audible. Best Twain book I've ever read.

Best Mark Twain of all of Mark Twain's...

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I enjoyed this one as much as any of Twain's works, and I couldn't tell where Twain's work stopped and Nelson's began. I hope Mr Nelson does a sequel, or series, maybe the Finns and Sawyers - the next generation.

Great adventure!

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My children,ages 9 and 12 enjoyed all of the Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn books so we embarked on this story. I did not like the departure into more themes like rape and child molestation and felt this inclusion from the other author was overly graphic and unnecessary. Overall, it was an enjoyable listen.

A suspenseful story with historical insight

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I never thought I could like a non canonical ending to a book before but this is my favorite version of Huck in any of the books. It really feels like a great evolution of his character from becoming a hero saving Jim in the original tales to really coming into his own here.

Just shockingly good

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