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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

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Embark on a Timeless Journey of Freedom and Friendship

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a groundbreaking American classic that captures the spirit of adventure, the complexities of human nature, and the quest for freedom. This unabridged and complete 1884 edition presents Twain’s original masterpiece in all its authenticity.



Huck’s Unforgettable Adventure

Set along the mighty Mississippi River, the story follows young Huck Finn as he escapes from his abusive father and embarks on an epic journey of discovery. Joined by Jim, a runaway slave, Huck navigates treacherous waters, confronts moral dilemmas, and questions societal norms as their bond deepens.



A Masterpiece of Satire and Social Commentary

Mark Twain weaves humor, wit, and biting social critique into Huck’s adventures, addressing themes of racism, freedom, and the hypocrisy of ""civilized"" society. Through Huck’s eyes, Twain explores what it means to be truly free and to stand against injustice.



An Enduring American Classic

Widely regarded as one of the greatest novels in American literature, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn continues to captivate readers with its vivid characters, rich storytelling, and timeless themes. Twain’s brilliance shines in this masterpiece, offering both entertainment and profound insights into human nature.



Whether you’re reading it for the first time or revisiting an old favorite, this unabridged edition of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is an essential addition to your literary collection.

360 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 29, 2024

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About the author

Mark Twain

8,874 books18.7k followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

Samuel Langhorne Clemens, known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an American writer, humorist and essayist. He was praised as the "greatest humorist the United States has produced," with William Faulkner calling him "the father of American literature." His novels include The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and its sequel, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), with the latter often called the "Great American Novel." Twain also wrote A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889) and Pudd'nhead Wilson (1894), and co-wrote The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today (1873) with Charles Dudley Warner.

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235 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 78 reviews
Profile Image for Beth Roger aka Katiebella_Reads.
712 reviews45 followers
February 27, 2025
5⭐️

This book challenges racism and slavery, and it changed the way American fiction was written. Published in 1885, the friendship between Huck and Jim gave hope that whites and blacks could be united. Though written only 20 years after the Civil War, it takes place during it.

Originally written for adults. Mark twain himself said, *"I am greatly troubled by what you say. I wrote 'Tom Sawyer' & 'Huck Finn' for adults exclusively, & it always distressed me when I find that boys and girls have been allowed access to them."* This was a book written to address the sociopolitical issue that was/is slavery and racism in a deeper way, durring a time when slavery had just been abolished and parts of the country were still reeling.

Twain wanted readers to confront uncomfortable truths of human nature and to recognize the flaws in societal norms.

Huck is around 13 during the adventures of this tale. He has run away from home. Run away from an abusive alcoholic father. Run away from the good widow trying to "civilize" him.

Along the way, he meets Jim. One of the Widow's slaves that Huck had befriended. Together, they make their way up the Mississippi. Huck is on an adventure, Jim is on his way to freedom.

It had definitely been a few years since I had read this the last time. Though I remembered the basics, some of the impressive details had been forgotten.

Huck is willing to risk everything to get Jim to freedom. He fully believes that this is an act that will damn his soul and send him to Hell. He constantly battles internally between doing what he has been taught is right and what he feels is right, just, and human.

This book is remarkable for the time it was written.
Profile Image for Julie.
640 reviews
February 20, 2025
I reread this after 55+ years because I had just finished James and wanted to compare. The racism of HF is pretty hard to take, not just the language but what seemed like irrelevant ventures into more racism (for example Huck’s father discussing a light-skinned black man).
I added a second star only in recognition of Twain’s outstanding descriptions of nature, especially storms.
116 reviews
Read
April 10, 2025
Hadn’t read this yet and wanted to before reading James by Percival Everett. How do you rate a book that you should read, just cause, but didn’t really enjoy 🤔? Lotta racist jerks in this book.
Profile Image for Mike Little.
233 reviews7 followers
October 13, 2024
I read this earlier in life and then I read the recent novel, James and that led me back to Huckleberry. Twain’s ear for and ability to express vernacular in writing is always impressive and never more so than in Huckleberry Finn. The story is a nicely linked and long series of episodes and all were enjoyable, except, for me at least, the long last part about helping Jim, the slave and friend, escape from captivity. There was a coldness and cruelty, not to mention stupidity, to that endless passage that had me skimming and grimacing.

But it is a classic and very much worth reading. So many of us would want Twain at out imaginary dinner with 10 luminaries from the past and I count myself in that group.
Profile Image for Nori.
222 reviews41 followers
February 17, 2025
Does 2 stars make me a philistine? I understand this is supposed to be a classic. I read it because I want to read “James,” so I figured I should understand that on which it was based.

I’m not really interested in Huck’s capers. Less so, Tom’s, when he surfaces. The only really interesting thing is his perception of the morality around helping Jim escape slavery. Is this the entire point of the book? Did it land better in the 19th century?
Profile Image for Audrey Lynne.
6 reviews1 follower
Read
June 13, 2025
Did I miss the point?

I’m glad I read this, as a Missourian who was somehow never assigned any Mark Twain growing up. I keep seeing the hype about Percival Everett’s James, but it seemed irresponsible to know nothing about the source material.

Reading Huck Finn, I learned a lot about the time period and young America, about rural Missouri and river culture and about slavery (perhaps not enough). I liked Twain’s writing of a child’s perspective, and there were a lot of fun silly and clever moments that I liked. However I never felt the through-line of a plot that keeps me interested in a story. Picking up this book each time felt more like ‘ok, what’s Huck Finn getting up to today?’ Which seems to be intentional, but didn’t thrill me.

Huckleberry had a couple sweet moments where he thought through what made him a good person, and it feels like he almost got the point…but I guess my 21st century lens makes me surprised that he never considered the morality of slavery as a whole. On that note, I’m not sure what qualifies Twain to know how to portray any of Jim’s feelings or reactions to anything on the story, like babysitting Huck, going along with the boys delusions, and reacting to being “freed”, but it felt super disingenuous. The ending felt dumb, patting the white folks on the back for “allowing” Jim to be free. Which is why I’m excited to read James next!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ashleigh.
290 reviews29 followers
March 13, 2025
I read this before reading James, and I hear that isn't necessary. The accents and adventure are classic and Mark Twain is a good writer. The overt racism of everyone and the unnecessary cruelty of Tom's plans for Jim made this book not the enjoyable yarn it was meant to be. It hasn't aged well due to this. 2.5 stars
Profile Image for Kevin Shock.
21 reviews
April 21, 2025
Oh, goodness, there are probably lots of things i could comment on, but let’s focus on Twain’s writing style. Some parts of the book are easy to read, because he has a gift for spinning a story, as long as he remains focused…which brings me to the entire last section with the Phelps and Tom Sawyer. I’m not sure what Twain hoped to accomplish with Tom’s constant meddling and stream-of-consciousness adventure planning, but it mostly put me to sleep or made me roll my eyes at the absurdity of the main characters. I read it 35+ years ago and can’t remember what I thought of it then. Now I reread it as a precursor to _James_, and I’m betting that it will make that book seem genius, if only by comparison. Twain would have benefited from an honest editor, I’m assuming.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Heather Bivona.
337 reviews
April 28, 2025
Twain paints it all — the slow-moving river, the ramshackle towns, the easygoing, sometimes dangerous folks living along the banks. Huck’s adventures aren’t about fancy plans or wild dreams; they're about survival. He uses plain old street smarts — quick thinking, honesty when it counts, and a gut sense for right and wrong — to make his way through a world that's often unfair and brutal.

What really stood out to me was Huck’s need for a real companion, which he finds in Jim. More than just traveling partners, they form a bond that feels deeper than anything Huck had before. Jim isn't just someone Huck helps; he's someone Huck needs — for friendship, for trust, and even for a sense of family that Huck’s never really had.

The difference between Huck and Tom Sawyer really shines here too. Tom’s all about outlandish schemes and make-believe — life is a game for him, full of dramatic rescues and made-up rules. Huck, though, sees life for what it is. No fuss, no fantasy. He adapts, trusts his instincts, and moves forward with a kind of honest simplicity. I found myself rooting for Huck a lot more, because his way of living — and loving — felt real.
Profile Image for Tami.
54 reviews
November 20, 2025
Mark Twain has written a master class in satire, exposing the hypocrisy, cruelty, and absurdity of “civilized” society through humor, irony, and sharp social commentary. This was not an easy read. The novel deals with painful, delicate topics, and the ending was especially difficult as Tom’s elaborate “adventure” becomes needless torment for Jim, done purely for Tom’s own entertainment. Still, Huck’s moral journey was the heart of the book for me. Watching him grow from a confused boy shaped by corrupt beliefs into someone who follows his own conscience, even when it costs him everything, made the novel powerful and emotionally resonant.
Profile Image for Jackie.
200 reviews
April 2, 2025
I last read this 30 years ago (30?!?!) and remembered liking it but nothing else. It’s pretty amazing how much my perspective has changed in that time; while I still appreciated the book and loved the character of a Huck Finn, I was SO MAD at Tom Sawyer. That kid really highlighted the views (and cruelty) of everyday people of the time.
64 reviews
September 10, 2025
I was surprised by how much I had forgotten about this novel! I am so glad I refreshed my memories! It was helpful to read it alongside James and make some comparisons!
Profile Image for Beth.
71 reviews3 followers
June 6, 2025
A true classic

I had read part of the book years ago but I’m delighted that I read it all this time. It is a true classic not to be missed. It is on many banned book lists which is a shame. Many readers will be stopped from reading this great story.
20 reviews
April 24, 2025
A classic that never ages

Mark Twain did an important service to the slavery abolition movement with this book. Nobody can stay unmoved by the warm and good hearted nature of Jim, the running slave, and the injustice and cruelty he was exposed to just because his skin color. Twain's storytelling remained fresh and intriguing in spite of the the 150 years since its time. The only reservation is with regard to the last part when Huckleberry meets Tom, which seemed a little bit far fetched to me, and made me skip this part. Except for this, it is a great book.
Profile Image for Kathy Buchko.
150 reviews3 followers
January 14, 2025
Just finished the unabridged, original version of this classic by Mark Twain, and must admit it was difficult to understand the words and dialect of both Huck and Jim, but I loved every minute of it! Can't wait to compare this novel and the character Jim with the new novel, "James" by Percival Everett.
172 reviews3 followers
January 31, 2025
Mark Twain Never Disappoints

This was such a fun read! It’s as entertaining as Tom Sawyer. The characters are so fun and interesting. The story is fast paced, sometimes a little scary and sometimes amusing. What a great writer Mark Twain was!
1 review
December 1, 2024
19th century American life & boys’ adventures

I read this along with Percival Everett’s James for a lit class. The contrasts are sweet & also painful. Outstanding.
17 reviews
January 7, 2025
About what you would expect from a book from 1884 set in the South. It's a classic, so I read it, but I can't say I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for T. C. C..
71 reviews1 follower
June 20, 2025
Read this in "preparation" for reading James by Percival Everett. While I had read plenty of passages and excerpts by Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens), I had never previously read—in its entirety—The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I think that's fascinating...sooooo many classics that I've never read before or had the opportunity to read before. I think possibly this classic was required reading for some school children...but never in any of my classes when I was growing up (I was placed in advanced collegiate-level English classes all through high school, and it was never presented on reading lists for those classes).

I found this highly entertaining...as, I suppose, it was meant to be. High jinx and ridiculous capers all over the place in addition to the fantasy of escapist travel for young minds. What middle or high-schooler doesn't dream about escaping the rules and structures of home life or society (regardless of class) and discovering the wide and strange world fraught with danger and discovery?

I was completely enraptured in the adventure about until the injection of that other Twain classic character—Tom Sawyer—into the storyline. Then things became...erm...rather almost too ridiculous for my tolerance. It was mad-cap-ism and ruthless, unrelenting stupidity initiated by the rapscallion Sawyer. I tried to think what a character of his acuity and hyper-control-ism, with the need to manage every aspect of operations...what a person like that might be classified as in today's social sphere. I can't come up with much other than extreme-narcissistic ADHD. Also, the world of the Mississippi River and expansionist west is a world lost to time...obviously escapism by raft on the Mississippi is not possible today...with the dangers of commercial barges and flotilla and toxic pollution posing more hazards to well-being than ever a steamboat might've in the mid-1800s.

I happened to find a 1967-printed copy of the "complete and unabridged" version of Twain's novel at a library book sale earlier this spring. While this is definitely the type of adventure book that would have fascinated me as a youth, I wonder how young readers of today would cope with the several alliterative dialects used in the course of dialogue in this book. For, not only have dialects changed, but references made alliteratively to 19th-century cultural phenomena might be lost on today's young reader [without the aid of footnotes]. There are plenty of edited and interpretive versions of this Twain classic, that may be more suitable for young contemporary readers—particularly those sensitive to historic colloquialisms in reference to oppressed slaves, etc.
Profile Image for Ryan Johnson.
160 reviews2 followers
December 12, 2025
Huckleberry Finn

59/2025.

I read “James” much earlier in the year and decided I needed to reread Huck Finn (or perhaps read for the first time; I’m sure the version I read as a kid was abridged). It’s clear why James was so phenomenal- it not only recentered “Jim” but improved the laggy middle section that Twain apparently struggled to write.

Here we have Mark Twain’s sequel to Tim Sawyer, perhaps in name only. Tom was written for children bit Huck is a great American moral novel for adults. While deeply inspired by Twain’s own early life, there is a fantastical element to this story that defies reality while laying bare the absurdity of the institution of slavery and racial hierarchy in 19th century America.

Make no mistake - Samuel Clemens set out to show the absurdity of the chattel slavery system and southern culture, and absolutely accomplished that.

One of the quintessentially American beliefs that Twain skewers in this novel is that morality, chivalry, dignity and beauty are uniquely pastoral; that civilization is antithetical to moral rectitude and destructive of any beauty (here he must disappoint Upton Sinclair, Walter Scott, Hemingway). Despite the uniquely American nature of the tale, it owes much to Dickens (mixing gritty poverty and moralizing) and Cervantes (the original “on the road to…” comedy buddy story). Huck himself is an ironic embodiment of this ethic, and an avatar for an America which was then only barely out of its own infancy and steal grappling with the moral corruption of slavery. Huck’s ability to reason his way out of or into any moral position he wants is profound. Twain uses him to show that antebellum southern society wasn’t as idyllic as its boosters would have us believe (as someone who adopted New England and left the South in the ashes, he understood it too well).

I wonder if any other book is as perfect at encapsulating the aftermath of Reconstruction; despite taking place before the war and being written in the two decades following, it’s a testament to the changing times and unchanging racism in America.
Profile Image for Meghan.
207 reviews
August 29, 2025
This was a reread for me, after decades from the last time I read it. I had finished rereading The Adventures of Tom Sawyer hours before starting in on Huck Finn. I preferred Tom’s Adventures, although when Tom appears in this one I preferred Huck’s character to Tom’s. It was a monumental challenge for me to “get past” the casual use of the n-word and the “life” of racism for the time period this novel was set and written in. By life I mean it’s normalcy in daily life for everyone, which is utterly foreign to my sensibilities. It hurt to read it, hurt my soul and my humanity. It sickens me to step into a time when human beings were not seen as human beings and to do so inside a humorous novel. I know Twain’s purpose in writing this novel was to rail against those times, but reading this decades after my first read, that target falls short of the mark for me, by a fair distance. Twain’s writing skill is exceptional and his talent for storytelling is superb. But. I could not ‘enjoy’ this book; I could only enjoy parts of it. I had to read it with a split mind, half of it reading for content, the other half constantly reminding myself that Twain was an abolitionist, that the language he used and writing such a casual acceptance of dehumanizing people as portrayed in the novel was to show that it’s unacceptable. In The Adventures of Tom Sawyer that was also an issue, but it was not as excessive as in the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In this novel it’s pervasive and oppressive, or it was for me. I had to compartmentalize parts I could enjoy within an overall distaste for having to read the whole of a time in America when men were not seen as nor treated as men.
Profile Image for Jenny Ashby.
998 reviews13 followers
September 17, 2025
I was assigned this book during my senior year of high school, but it was, like May of senior year! How could I be expected to actually read it?! So here I am almost 40 years finally getting around to it. I was excited because I love A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court and was looking forward to getting into more Twain. Unfortunately, I am disappointed with this novel. I assume some of my disappointment is my modern day wokedness, although I think that the things that disappointed me the most were meant to make the reader feel uncomfortable even when Twain wrote it. First of all,, I know it is always one of the most challenged books each year larger because of the use of the n-word. However, I guess I had always assumed that ugly word reared its head 2-3 times throughout the novel, not hundreds. I can allow that the word was in keeping with the times, but it's still uncomfortable to read. But more than that, I had a really hard time with Tom Sawyer drawing out Jim's imprisonment just for the sake of adventure, and that was even before we found out that he was free the entire time. Couldn't really get into the hijinks of it all when it affects Jim's actual life. Which was the point, I believe. Sometime in the next few weeks I will be reading James and am very curious to see that take on the whole story.
1 review
July 26, 2025
I read Huckleberry Finn many years ago and remember that I liked it. Recently I read James and became curious as to differences in the two books. Thus I just reread HF. I realized I actually remembered very little of it. There is some overlap of events but a lot of new ones in James. James is a much better book I think and more of a page turner. There is a lot of vernacular in HF that makes it hard to get through. There is some in James as well but it seemed to flow better. Huckleberry Finn comes off as a sympathetic character in both (more so in HF) but of course is a more prominent presence in HF. He is resourceful, thoughtful and savvy for a 13-year old and follows his own moral code. As others noted, the book became tedious and vexing after Tom Sawyer reentered the story towards the end. Perhaps the purpose was to contrast a silly, self-obsessed boy who really hasn’t struggled much with the more mature Huck Finn who has grown and become self-sufficient through his hardscrabble life.
Profile Image for Norma.
428 reviews
June 23, 2025
Reading this unabridged and uncensored version of Huckleberry Finn was for the most part an eye-opener but mostly a painful read. The initial chapters dealt with Huck and Jim venturing down the Mississippi and were more interesting. The rest of the book labored with the scammy pranks Huck, The King and Duke played to cheat money from townspeople. The rapscallion adventures of Huck, Tom and Jim were laborious, and the reading went more slowly than I’d wish as I labored with the colloquial language. I can’t say that I ever read the original 1885 text but was amazed with the uncomfortable racial undertones and language. Attempting to skim pages was my deed to get through it. Throughout the story, Jim was a always the kind, gentle soul. I read this as a prelude to reading James by Percival Everett for our July book club.
5 reviews
November 8, 2025
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i really enjoyed this book up until tom sawyer showed up knowing jim was free, keeping this man from his family for his own entertainment. what a rotten kid. sure he paid him for his troubles but he basically tortured him with like bugs and sh**. writing with his own blood. just having fun at the mean expense of this poor guy. and huck just going along with it for some reason. of course jim was gonna assume he had no choice. i feel like the moral of the story is kids can be rotten? lol. but if it had ended before tom showed up, i think it might have been a much better read for me, even with a possible abrupt ending, because up until then i couldn’t put it down. his decision about, fine then ill just go to hell? absolutely amazing. i LOVED that. tom just ruined it. four stars.
422 reviews
December 9, 2025
Huck Finn certainly does lead an adventurous life and his friends Tom Sawyer and Jim get sucked in and add to the adventures. We must not forget Aunt Sally and Aunt Polly as they have significant roles in the adventure at the end. My favorite quote comes from Huck: "It's lovely to live on a raft. We had the sky up there, all speckled with stars, and we used to lay on our backs and look up at them and discuss about whether they was made or only happened. Jim allowed they was made but I allowed they happened...We used to watch the stars that fell, too, and see them streak down. Jim allowed they'd got spoiled and was hove out of the nest." I thought this book was a great read and at times a wonderful ride on the raft.
53 reviews1 follower
September 23, 2024
I’ve known this book for ages, but I’ve never thought of reading the book until I had to for one of my projects. At first, it wasn't easy to read because it used a first-person narrative to Huckleberry’s literacy level. Symbolism and weather effects are used throughout the book to express Huckle's moral development, as shown by the evolving relationship between Jim and Huckleberry. I seriously thought Mark Twain was a genius at writing. The book may make someone uncomfortable, but the book is written well regardless. I enjoyed it a lot. This is an excellent book to read if you are seeking a thought-provoking historical fiction novel.
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