Dawn Potter
As I child, I read Twain avidly. I
loved Huck and his river; I laughed at the Duke of Bilgewater; I feared for
Jim. I read and reread Huck Finn, as I
reread the novels of Dickens: because I was absorbed by the characters and the
language of their world. I couldn’t get enough of those words. In real life I
may have been a timid, landlocked girl, but in my head I was Huck, “light[ing]
out for the Territory ahead of the rest, because Aunt Sally she’s going to
adopt me and civilize me and I can’t stand it.”
And then I grew
up. Suddenly I found that I was the parent of a nine-year-old boy who was eager
for complex stories about heroes but was not yet facile enough at reading to
manage the books themselves. Perhaps an audiobook would do. Perhaps Huck
Finn.
Huck Finn indeed. For months our house echoed with the tale.
At every spare moment, while sorting baseball cards or building Lego castles,
while lying in bed or tying his sneakers, my son listened to Huck
Finn. Over and over he played that
recording; over and over he followed Huck and Jim down the roiling Mississippi,
into the dark theater, out into the tangled underbrush.
And then one day,
he trailed after to me into the kitchen and said, “Mom, I don’t understand. Why
does Jim have to do what Huck says? Isn’t Jim the grown-up?”
I nearly dropped a
plate.
There’s something about Huck
Finn that resists easy morality, easy
explanations; something that continues to jolt me, to make me recognize that
even the simplest query may never have an answer. My family lives in rural
Maine, the whitest state in the union. Thus, for my small son, the race issue
was nearly invisible. To me, it was far more fraught; yet Twain managed to
catch us both off guard, to make both of us wince and worry, to make both of us
see the world and one another with new eyes.
“Why does Jim have
to do what Huck says?” asked my son. I put down my plate, and pulled out a
chair. And we sat there at the kitchen table, my boy and I, and we found
ourselves talking about Huck and Jim—not as if they were items on an English
test or characters on a page but as if they were people we knew as well as
ourselves, as if they were ourselves. We
talked about Huck and Jim as if they were secret facets of our own fears and
affections.
For me, nothing
has ever clarified the power, and the bravery, of Twain’s work more than this
child’s question and my reaction to it. A century after its publication, Huck
Finn is still teaching its complicated
lesson, still pressing us to examine our own humanity, still “light[ing] out
for the Territory ahead of the rest.” It’s still talking to us—and making us
talk to each other.
What more can we
ask of a book?
[first published in The Village Pariah 1, no. 1 (2010)]
4 comments:
And that conversation is/was ever so much more valuable than any English test or State Assessment could ever be.
Wonderful post, Dawn. It makes me miss the kinds of talks I used to have with my own son.
Such an insightful question your son asked.
Thanks...this is perfect. I am going to be teaching Huck Finn to my Am Lit class...they've not read it ever, and I think it is worthy for their reading and thinking pleasure. This gives me a great starting point. And, as always, you made me think about my own reactions to things in novels that didn't make sense. For me, the stories of little girls stuck in boarding schools and other types of arrangements worried me a lot when I was young: The Little Princess, Jane Eyre, The Secret Garden...ah, the books kids don't get to read anymore...I don't know that today's literature asks the same sort of questions.
Oh, those stuck-little-girl stories! They worried me too, but I couldn't stop reading them. Carlene: here's a personal essay topic for you. . . .
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