Contributor
De Koster, Katie, 1948-
Imprint:San Diego, CA : Greenhaven Press, 1998.
Description208 p. ; 23 cm.
Note:Mark Twain: a biography. - Huckleberry Finn is art drawn from life / Brander Matthews. - Precisely the right tone of voice / Victor A. Doyno. - The use of humor helps point up Huck's moral dilema / James M. Cox. - Huck Finn forced Mark Twain to become a master novelist / Alfred Kazin. - Games: a key to understanding Huckleberry Finn / Ralph Cohen. - Extraordinary characters among provincial country folk / Horace Spencer Fiske. - Huck Finn as a symbol of Jacksonian ideals / Andrew Jay Hoffman. - A satire on American institutions / Gladys Carmen Bellamy. - American civilization threatens to destroy Huck / Jay Martin. - Huckleberry Finn is racist trash / John H. Wallace. - The irony of an "uncivilized" friendship / Richard K. Barksdale. - Mark Twain and African American voices / Shelley Fisher Fishkin. - Blackface minstrels influenced many aspects of Huck Finn / Eric Lott. - Huckleberry Finn versus Uncle Tom's Cabin / Jane Smiley. - A bitterly comic inversion of tragic truth / Joyce A. Rowe. - A psychoanalytic study of the ending of Huckleberry Finn / José Barchilon and Joel S. Kovel. - A savage indictment of "the best authorities" / Carson Gibb. - A beautifully crafted ending / Richard Hill.
Bibliography Note:"Works by Mark Twain": p. 201-203.
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (p. 198-200) and index.