Huck Finn, a young boy escaping his abusive father, journeys down the Mississippi River with an escaped slave, Jim, navigating issues of freedom, friendship, and racism in the pre-Civil War South.
This includes excerpts from Life on the Mississippi, Roughing It, The Autobiography of Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, A Tramp Abroad, Stories of Mark Twain
In a small Missouri town, a seemingly insignificant observation by a quirky lawyer leads to a dramatic revelation involving switched identities, race, and murder.
Two boys, one a prince and the other a pauper, exchange places, revealing stark contrasts in class and challenging assumptions about identity and justice in Tudor England.
A memoir that explores Mark Twain's experiences as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River, reflecting on the history and changes along the river's course.