Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is one of the defining novels of American literature: a bold, humorous, and deeply moving story of freedom, friendship, conscience, and life along the Mississippi River.
Huck Finn, a restless boy fleeing an abusive father, escapes down the river on a raft with Jim, an enslaved man seeking freedom. Their journey brings them into contact with frauds, feuding families, superstition, kindness, cruelty, and the contradictions of a society built on injustice. As Huck is forced to choose between what he has been taught and what he knows in his heart to be right, the novel becomes a powerful exploration of moral courage.
First published in 1884, Twain's masterpiece combines adventure, satire, vernacular storytelling, and social criticism with extraordinary force. Both comic and unsettling, it exposes the hypocrisy of "civilized" society while celebrating the possibility of human connection beyond race, class, and convention.
A landmark of American fiction, this unforgettable novel continues to challenge and inspire readers with its wit, humanity, and searching vision of freedom.