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Tag Archives: Huckleberry Finn (Fictitious character)

Big Jim and the White Boy: An American Classic Reimagined by David F Walker, Marcus Kwame Anderson

28 Friday Feb 2025

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in adventure, Fiction, Graphic novel, Travel, United States

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comics (Graphic works), fugitive slaves, graphic novels, historical novels, Huckleberry Finn (Fictitious character), male friendship, race relations, runaway children

A BEST GRAPHIC NOVEL OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post, School Library Journal, Library Journal

So wonderful – I absolutely loved and highly recommend this graphic novel which is a retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

“A thought-provoking, profoundly moving adventure story. Not to be missed.”—Library Journal, starred review

“The book is an action-packed page-turner, with dastardly villains, narrow escapes, and a twist at the end that sheds a new light on the entire story.”—School Library Journal

“A vital reconsideration of an American classic.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review

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James: a Novel by Percival Everett  

17 Monday Jun 2024

Posted by Weston Public Library Staff in action, adventure, Fiction, Humor, United States

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fugitive slaves, Huckleberry Finn (Fictitious character), male friendship, Mississippi River, Missouri, race relations, runaway children

James reimagines the classic Huckleberry Finn story from Jim’s perspective in a funny, thought-provoking page-turner.

“James is funny and horrifying, brilliant and riveting. In telling the story of Jim instead of Huckleberry Finn, Percival Everett delivers a powerful, necessary corrective to both literature and history. I found myself cheering both the writer and his hero. Who should read this book? Every single person in the country.”—Ann Patchett

“Ingenious … Jim’s wrenching odyssey concludes with remarkable revelations, violent showdowns, and insightful meditations on literature and philosophy. Everett has outdone himself.”
—Publisher’s Weekly (Starred Review)

“[A] careful and thought-provoking auditing of Huckleberry Finn. . . [James is] a kind of commentary or midrash, broadening our understanding of an endangered classic by bringing out the tragedy behind the comic facade. And that is no small thing. I expect that James will be spoken of as a repudiation of Huckleberry Finn, but a book like this can only be written in a spirit of engaged devotion. More than a correction, it’s a rescue mission. And maybe this time it will work.” —The Wall Street Journal

“Percival Everett is a giant of American letters, and James is a canon-shatteringly great book. Unforgiving and compassionate, beautiful and brutal, a tragedy and a farce, this brilliant novel rewrites literary history to let us hear the voices it has long suppressed.”—Hernan Diaz, author of Trust

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