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Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Contributor(s): Gribben, Alan (Editor), Wong, Irene (Editor)

ISBN: 9781961938137

Publisher: Black Belt Press

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Pub Date: April 7, 2025

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.57" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 0.81 lbs) 272 pages

BISAC Categories:

Fiction | Classics

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: The Translated Dialect Edition of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, fully annotated and illustrated with over 100 of True Williams's original drawings, is the most enjoyable edition of this novel ever published. Adulthood is a remote prospect to the youths of a riverside village who whitewash a fence, attend school and church, play Robin Hood, experience puppy love, witness a murder, raft on the Mississippi River, skylark on an island, attend their own funerals, get lost in a cave, and find buried treasure. Tom Sawyer is the book that introduces Huckleberry Finn, who will narrate his own story as a masterful sequel to this rollicking, nostalgic fantasy about boyhood.

Vastly more critical commentary has been devoted to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn than to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. It is easy to understand why. An adult narrator tells Tom Sawyer's story, and all of it takes place in a small village. When Mark Twain had the inspiration to feature an outcast boy from that novel for a sequel, he wisely let Huckleberry Finn relate, in his own priceless voice, the hazardous adventures he undergoes after leaving St. Petersburg. All the same, readers who jump into Huck's weightier story without first meeting the cast of characters in Tom Sawyer are starting in medias res, cheating themselves of the simpler warm-up book before undertaking a complex and rewarding spin-off masterpiece, and defeating Mark Twain's plan to produce an integral chronicle in two volumes. (He would attempt additional sequels, but those lacked the magic of these first books.)

Brief description: Alan Gribben, PhD, previously edited the Original Language Editions and the NewSouth Editions of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn that offer instructors and students their choice of Twain's original texts or versions omitting the racial invectives. He invested fifty years of travel and research in writing Mark Twain's Literary Resources: A Reconstruction of His Library and Reading. He also co-founded the Mark Twain Circle of America, co-edited Mark Twain on the Move: A Travel Reader, edited the Mark Twain Journal: The Author and His Era for a dozen years, and wrote a biography of the Texas library founder Harry Ransom.

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