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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
This is regarded as one of the greatest pieces of American Literature next to the preceding book "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer". When somebody is using a standard to measure good literature to, they bring up HF. When they want to explain why popular media they don't like is getting too much attention, they bring up the meager TAoHF. ED has done this, SA has done this, TVT has done this, we have done this.
I want you to explain to me why, without butthurt bullshit mind you, why Huckleberry Finn is as great as people says it is. I want you to explain to me all of the good parts, and point out justifications for their existence. Also take note of how this little book should be treated with more respect than most of the series out there, and why it has earned this little reputation it has.
This piques my interest very much, because I doubt this book is as great as everyone says it is.
Comments
XD
The history and controversy set it's pedestal very high, and it can be regarded as very good with it's lifetime, other than that though, if released at any other time I am pretty sure it would not have had the impact it had now.
randy gay ogresseveral thousand Black people-~hands Bob some popcorn~
If you need specifics, read an analysis of Huck Finn.
I just have a question.
Why do people keep using it as a standard to compare anime or fanfiction against? It doesn't make one bit of fucking sense. Most people (around 40% of Americans I have met have read and remember the book anyway) know more about HuckFinn than they do about NGE/PrincessTutu/Nanoha, yet the internet people keep whining about how those animes are more popular and have more devotion to them than HuckFinn does.
I can ask everyone I meet today which one they heard about most or first, HuckFinn or Nanoha, and I can safely say more people know about HuckFinn than Nanoha.
Most animes MAY have 400,000+ articles/words for their articles than this book does, but this book has more history and popularity than those things could possibly get, and I don't see why they even try bringing that up as an argument.
I can ask everyone I meet today which one they heard about most or first, HuckFinn or Nanoha, and I can safely say more people know about HuckFinn than Nanoha.
Most animes MAY have 400,000+ articles/words for their articles than this book does, but this book has more history and popularity than those things could possibly get, and I don't see why they even try bringing that up as an argument."
Precisely. Huck Finn and Nanoha are on a different level, so there's little point in comparing them. Of course, if they think things like the latter are more deserving of analysis, then there's a problem (*cough*, *cough*, "Kodomo No Jikan is a deeply psychological and sociological work...")
Does anyone other than like one troper who won't be named actually think that?
I thought most people just watched it for the creepy fanservice, and just had a few of that kind of fan.