A Book That Everyone Can Relate To

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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a book that everyone at some point in their life will be able to relate to. The book contains everyday conflicts and lessons that people in the world today deal with. Huck goes through life changing situations where he can show anyone who reads the book what you can get out of the good and bad times. Huck will have to make decisions that ordinary people in his time would not have to. Part of the reason this is the case is because of Huck's incredible personality and how he makes his decisions. Some will praise him, others will be filled with disappointment. A key point in this book is mistakes. Huck makes mistakes but he does not dwell on the fact that he made the mistake but that he has to make the best of it and work it out. It proves that so many people make a mistake then keep on looking back on it and they end up not trying to make the best out of the the mistake.

However Huck is not perfect and he does not always pick the best solution for a problem. He does not have a great life either. “Huck lives with Miss Watson who is trying to civilize him. He and Tom Sawyer become friends with her slave Jim. Huck's drunk father returns to try and take Huck back, but Huck fakes his own murder and runs away with Jim to a nearby island. Jim and Huck discover a raft, which they make their new home and set out to sail down the Mississippi River where they will both be free(The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Bellmore-Merrick Central High School English Department)”. Huck now has to live this out and make the best of it. This is the one major conflict that comes up in the first moments of the book. The first intra personal conflict that Huck is presented with is at the beginning of the book, “Huck ...

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...he river. Because Pap is an abusive father, this conflict obviously is detrimental to Huck’s safety. So, Huck fakes his own death and plans to escape the disgraceful life that he has been forced to live in. A third example of interpersonal conflict can be seen in the chapter set in one of the small frontier towns that Huck lands in during his journey. Briefly, a conflict arises when a character named Boggs, the town outcast, continuously jeers throughout the town about Colonel Sherburn. In reply, Sherburn warns Boggs to stop or suffer the consequences which is being shot. When Boggs does not acknowledge how serious Colonel Sherburn is, his fate is met with a shotgun, Colonel Sherburn shot him (Conflicts in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Anne Catey)”. This has barley anything to do with Huck, but it is another great example of the constant conflict from this book.

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