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LDS Books, Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians
TITLE: Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians
AUTHOR: Mark Twain & Lee Nelson
PRICE: $16.11 (Reg $18.95)

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ISBN: 1-55517-680-1, SIZE: 277 pages, 5.5 x 8.5", Hardback
AVAILABLE: May 2003
CATEGORY: Fiction/ Adventure
 

Key Features:

  • Mark Twain’s long-lost novel comes to life in a wonderful collaboration with legendary Western writer Lee Nelson.
  • Readers say they can’t distinguish where Twain leaves off and Nelson begins.
  • Nelson’s writing credentials include more than 30 books, including the best-selling Storm Testament series set in the 1800s.

In 1885 while The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was becoming one of the best-selling American classics of modern times, Mark Twain began this sequel in which Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer and Jim head west on the trail of two white girls kidnapped by Sioux warriors, learning the hard way that “book Injuns and real Injuns ain’t the same.” Fifteen thousand words into the work, Twain stopped in the middle of a sentence, never to go back; the unfinished story sitting on dusty shelves for more than a hundred years until The University of California cut a deal with Utah author Lee Nelson to finish it.

This story, Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians, is the first new book with Mark Twain’s name on it in nearly a hundred years, with readers saying they can’t tell where Twain stops and Nelson begins: a story of adventure, wit and wisdom with Tom and Huck seeking true love while tramping through hostile Indian country, befriending Bill Hickman and Porter Rockwell, stealing from the United States Army, then on to face a gunfight and hangman’s noose in Sacramento, California.

Author's Note: I discovered Mark Twain’s unfinished story Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians when it was published in Life Magazine in 1968. I was in the Brigham Young University barbershop, reading part of the story before my haircut, and I read the rest afterward.

I was enthralled, hanging on every word as Huck, Tom and Jim joined up with the Mills family on the Platte River. A group of Sioux Indians befriended the family, then suddenly slaughtered the parents and older boys, and kidnapped the two girls and Jim. Huck and Tom joined forces with mountain man Brace Johnson to follow the Indians and rescue the girls. As they approached the Indian camp, getting ready for a daring rescue, the story suddenly ended, right in the middle of a sentence. I was so disappointed. Although Mark Twain wrote and published a number of books and stories after 1885, he never finished this one.

Early in 2002, while watching a documentary on Mark Twain on a local PBS station, I remembered reading the Among the Indians story in the barbershop. By this time I had published a dozen historical novels with settings on the American frontier, and realized I was probably as qualified as any other living author to finish the work begun by Twain. A little research on the web led me to those who controlled the copyright—The Mark Twain Foundation and the University of California Press. Contact was made, approval was granted, a contract was drawn up, and the following story is the result.

I have no idea how Twain intended to finish the story, and I reason that he didn’t know either, or he would have done it. I just hope that wherever he is, he enjoys my conclusion as much as I enjoyed his beginning.

Reviews-

"Huck Finn & Tom Sawyer Among The Indians presents a manuscript, written by American literary legend Mark Twain, written as a sequel to his classic novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" but which was left unfinished - in the middle of a climactic confrontation, no less. Long after Mark Twain's passing, ardent fan and scholar Lee Nelson gained approval of the Mark Twain Foundation (who were the legal holders of the copyright to Mark Twain's unfinished work), and finished the story with a flavor and a style as close to the feel of the original author, as well as an abiding hope that Mark Twain himself would approve even if modern-day literary scholars did not. The result is a fantastic adventure story, that revisits Huck, Tom, and Jim - when a group of Sioux Indians commits murder and kidnaping, Huck and Tom must mount a rescue to save the surviving victims, including Jim himself. Huck Finn & Tom Sawyer Among The Indians is an absolute "must-read" for anyone who enjoyed Mark Twain's original Huckleberry Finn classic."

"To Lee Nelson who, along with Mark Twain (no, I'm not kidding!) wrote Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer Among the Indians. This book was over-looked in a flurry of scholarly productions on the subject of Huckleberry Finn and Twain published by the University of California."

—Carolyn Howard-Johnson, from her 2003 list of "Noble" Prize for Literature
Click here to read the entire list

"Just finished reading your (and Mark Twain's book). GREAT book that I thoroughly enjoyed! You did a great job. While reading it I think I have come to realize (possibily) why Mark Twain never finished it. I have read every book that Mark Twain ever wrote and got to know a little of his style. He seems to have a wry sense of humor that re-surfaces, over and over, in the midst of exciting trials and troubles. But in the beginning of (his) portion of the book it is all dark and almost depressing material with almost no humor. I read right past where he stopped and began to realize the book was at last like a "normal" Mark Twain book. I then backed up and realized I had crossed over into "your" portion of the book. Your portion read like Mark Twain. I cannot help but think he stopped because he found it too dark and depressing and not up to his normal excellence. Again, you did a great job!!"

-Skip Queen

"I was skeptical that anyone could finish a work begun by Mark Twain. I am thankful the project was undertaken by a writer as skillful as Lee Nelson. He did a superior job of incorporating the slang and candor of Huckleberry Finn into his writing and I had a difficult time finding where Twain stopped and Nelson began. . ."

-Audrey Krauss, LDSReview
Click here to read the entire review

"This book was full of non-stop adventure. There was always another challenge around the corner for Huck Finn and it was exciting to see how he got out of each fix in which he found himself."

-Christy Schoenfeld, LDSReview
Click here to read the entire review

"I loved this book! The anticipated letdown where Twin stopped and Nelson began just wasn't there! Twains story just got better as Nelson guided it to a wonserful conclusion. I owuld reccommend this book to anyone"

- Amanda Dickson, KSL Radio


 

 


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