Huckleberry Finn even at my adolescents age seems to be rather vague yet entertaining and purposeful. I enjoyed the book to the extent that was outside of the over exaggerated remarks and notions of Mark Twain. I proceed by saying the Author's Purpose AKA Mark Twain's was an absolute eccentric ideology that rather fitted perfect for its time period. Slavery was still in conflict as well as racial injustice and the abolitionist tone and philosophy Mark Twain provides, soothes a wave of perpetual morality within Huckleberry Finn, he also used colloquialism which I find to be of utmost prominent and achievement, for the objection of having a geographical language and setting provides a substantial amount of accuracy, and it didn't seem at all to show redundancy on that part. Though Huckleberry Finn was rather superfluous, I find it to be a narrative that reached its peak of sublime and ordinance, and has traveled through posterity for quite some time now.