I'm quite concerned that you may not have read "Huck Finn", or perhaps nothing at all by Mark Twain.
That would be a shame on an epic scale.
I read both when I was a child. I haven't read them since. Which means I have not read them in English, which is a shame, I suppose.
Edit: by "both" I mean Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn.
He may be the most quotable person, ever.
Actually, that would be a good Quickpoll question, if I could think of a few people who are in his league.
Oscar Wilde (my money is on him)
Shakespeare?
P. G. Wodehouse?
Douglas Adams?
Terry Pratchett? (Humorous writers tend to make good quotes)
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
To Kill a Mockingbird by Nelle Harper Lee
22/05/2011 06:28:11 PM
- 8334 Views
I reviewed it last year
22/05/2011 07:45:48 PM
- 1989 Views
Huh. I seem to have missed that.
22/05/2011 11:17:11 PM
- 1892 Views
As you noted, though, it's a fuller depiction of the South than "racist people."
23/05/2011 12:00:01 AM
- 1878 Views
It's a beautiful, incredible book.
22/05/2011 08:21:48 PM
- 1824 Views
Also
22/05/2011 11:33:27 PM
- 1757 Views
Don't you think that, you know, too many people have read it already?
23/05/2011 09:55:52 PM
- 1859 Views
Re: Don't you think that, you know, too many people have read it already?
24/05/2011 12:05:11 AM
- 1932 Views
Does that disqualify it?
24/05/2011 01:49:54 PM
- 1792 Views
I don't know, if a lot of people want to have this book in a Book Club, I have no objections.
24/05/2011 07:01:38 PM
- 1817 Views
Bah. This seems like a lame book. It will never catch on.
23/05/2011 01:31:10 AM
- 1925 Views
Um, there's already a rfilm version of this.
23/05/2011 01:11:36 PM
- 1678 Views
Suspect he knows that. *NM*
23/05/2011 01:15:46 PM
- 960 Views
Boy, that sarcastic subtext can be so hard to grasp in this virtual madness. *NM*
25/05/2011 06:49:03 AM
- 970 Views
I don't think I've ever met anyone who doesn't like this book. *NM*
23/05/2011 09:37:52 AM
- 946 Views
I've met some, but it was a casualty of middle school English. *NM*
23/05/2011 07:40:27 PM
- 871 Views
One of my nieces didn't like it. I think it was because she was forced to read it for school.
24/05/2011 02:33:23 AM
- 2015 Views
Re: One of my nieces didn't like it. I think it was because she was forced to read it for school.
24/05/2011 10:15:45 AM
- 1955 Views
Let me ask the politically incorrect questions, since no one else has.
24/05/2011 03:14:50 AM
- 2011 Views
I don't understand why having a guilty black man would have made it more powerful.
24/05/2011 05:59:17 AM
- 1959 Views
Hmm
24/05/2011 10:22:50 AM
- 1896 Views
I could see your argument if Tolkien were writing about feminism.
24/05/2011 02:15:42 PM
- 1912 Views
I think that's a fair point.
24/05/2011 07:00:04 PM
- 1910 Views
Calpurnia is a stereotype too.
24/05/2011 11:54:26 PM
- 1828 Views
The difference, at least in my recollection, is that Calpurnia is well-educated.
25/05/2011 08:09:58 PM
- 1778 Views
Re: The difference, at least in my recollection, is that Calpurnia is well-educated.
25/05/2011 10:59:26 PM
- 1876 Views
I think there was at least once incident showing a racist black person
24/05/2011 07:33:09 PM
- 2059 Views
I think it was written to accomplish a goal and it did that very well
25/05/2011 04:08:17 PM
- 1816 Views
Given your introductory portion
11/06/2011 01:28:40 AM
- 1833 Views
I have read both
11/06/2011 11:35:11 AM
- 1659 Views
All of Twain's stuff is great
13/06/2011 02:27:55 AM
- 1879 Views
Re: All of Twain's stuff is great
13/06/2011 08:17:05 AM
- 1794 Views
And some poets - Tennyson and Yeats come to mind. *NM*
13/06/2011 10:11:31 AM
- 859 Views