What Are The Author's Craft Techniques Used In The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn

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In the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, Jim is now believing in Huck to help and free him. With all of the author’s craft techniques used by Twain shows how the adventure between Huck and Jim is getting somewhere where he can be free. Huck is looking out for Jim and wants the best for him by going out and getting the canoe, to head to Cairo. Feeling the pressure of becoming the people that they have always wanted to be is now happening, Jim becoming free and Huck escaping his father. The author’s craft that Twain uses help express the new lives the Huck and Jim are creating on their journey. The different ways that represent the journey help depict the passion for this change, the homebound feeling of escaping all …show more content…

Huck feels excitement when they were approaching the destination “I felt easy and happy and light as a feather right off” (Twain 93). The excitement was getting the best of them because of them approaching Cairo. Twain compares them to a feather because they are almost feeling as if they have a weight that has been lifted off their shoulders ever since they left their home. When they are on the search for a new place for them to live, an allusion that Twain had embedded in was “Jump up and crack yo’ heels’ (93). This allusion connects to The Wizard of Oz. Even though The Wizard of Oz came out long after Twain’s novel it works while reading it today. Reading it now, the allusion makes sense to how Dorothy wanted to go home. It connected to how Jim and Huck want to go and find their new homes. Since both of the characters are close to being in the free states Jim gets excited. It is ironic because he had never been free before “I couldn’t ever ben free ef it hadn’ ben for Huck” (93). Jim feels that he could have never been more free if Huck had not helped. However, Jim could have became free on his own, that is what makes it ironic because Jim feels more free with the help of Huck even though he could have done it on his own. All in all, the way that Twain expressed the freedoms that Huck and Jim

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