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Tom Sawyer: Abroad: "I have found out that there ain't no surer way to find out whether you like people or hate them than to travel with them."

Taal
Engels
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Categorie

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Lovers of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885) will find in this less known sequel to Mark Twain’s masterpieces the same pleasure and enjoyment. The narrative follows Tom, Huck and their friend Jim, the newly-freed slave, throughout their unintentional journey into the African desert. In the beginning of the story, the three youngsters are kidnapped by an unhinged inventor who forcibly takes them on the board of his curious airship to an unknown destination.

As the strange inventor falls overboard due to a sudden sea storm, the boys have to manage to steer the uncontrollable balloon on their own. They ultimately find themselves amid the Sahara where they have to face a variety of dangers with which they have never been familiar before. Witty discussions, juvenile vocabulary and humorous quips are interspersed with the boys’ continuous struggles with armed robbers, lions, thirst and sand storms.

As in most of Twain’s works, the story’s events are not as important as the humorous dialogues, the laughable social commentary and the rhetorical labyrinths spun by Huck as a first-person narrator.

© 2013 A Word To The Wise (Ebook): 9781780009179

Publicatiedatum

Ebook: 20 augustus 2013

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  3. Ulysses: "Think you're escaping and run into yourself. Longest way round is the shortest way home." James Joyce
  4. A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court - "You can't depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus": "You can't depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus." Mark Twain
  5. Nana: "If you ask me what I came to do in this world, I, an artist, will answer you: I am here to live out loud." Emile Zola
  6. The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald
  7. The Brothers Karamazov: “I love mankind, he said, "but I find to my amazement that the more I love mankind as a whole, the less I love man in particular.” Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  8. Pride And Prejudice: "It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." Jane Austen
  9. The Death Of Ivan Ilych - "He in his madness prays for storms, and dreams that storms will bring him peace": "He in his madness prays for storms, and dreams that storms will bring him peace." Leo Tolstoy
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  12. To Be Read At Dusk: "If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers." Charles Dickens
  13. The Mill on the Floss: "The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history." George Eliot
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  17. Dead Souls: “The longer and more carefully we look at a funny story, the sadder it becomes.” Nikolai Gogol
  18. Daisy Miller: “She feels in italics and thinks in CAPITALS.” Henry James
  19. Iliad: The Story of Achilles Homer
  20. The Pupil: “Obstacles are those frightening things you see when you take you eyes off your goal.” Henry James
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  28. Heart of Darkness: "We live as we dream…alone…" Joseph Conrad
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  31. Madame Bovary: "She wanted to die, but she also wanted to live in Paris." Gustave Flaubert
  32. Around the World in Eighty Days: “I see that it is by no means useless to travel, if a man wants to see something new” Jules Verne
  33. 1984 Anna Lea
  34. In The South Seas: "Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant." Robert Louis Stevenson
  35. Jude The Obscure, By Thomas Hardy: "Every successful man is more or less a selfish man." Thomas Hardy
  36. Silas Marner: "There's nothing kills a man so soon as having nobody to find fault with but himself…" George Eliot
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  38. Romantic Adventures Of A Milkmaid: "Time changes everything except something within us which is always surprised by change." Thomas Hardy
  39. To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
  40. The Bethrothed: "Faces that have charmed us the most escape us the soonest." Sir Walter Scott
  41. The Jesuits‘ Church in G- E.T.A Hoffmann
  42. The Story Of The Gadsby: "One may fall but he falls by himself - Falls by himself with himself to blame." Rudyard Kipling
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