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Both Huckleberry Finn, from Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and Florida Grace Shepherd, from Lee Smith’s Saving Grace, were formed by their fathers. ...
Huckleberry Finn was strongly influenced by his father, Pap Finn. ... Huck also inherited his father’s superstition, as illustrated by the time he spilt the salt and the incident with Jim and the rattle snake prank. He was wary of his father and eventually chose to escape from him, but Huck oddly enjoyed the short period in the beginning of the novel when he was living in the old cabin with his father. Huck did not really enjoy becoming “sivilized,” and he did enjoy the carefree lifestyle that his father led. ...
Florida Grace Shepherd was very much a product of her father and his ideals. ... The novel is riddled with instanced where Grace resents her father, and his radical religious behavior. And yet, when others voice negative views of her father due to these very same characteristics, Grace feels obligated to defend her father.
Approximate Word count = 752 Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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