Community reading program
This year’s One Book. . . One Campus. . . One Community selection is “James,” a new novel by Percival Everett, an inventive, exciting, troubling, and very funny retelling of Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” a book that Hemingway claimed was the source of all modern American literature. A review of Everett’s novel calls it “an essential companion piece to the original novel, so much so that you can’t imagine ever again reading one without the other.”
When the enslaved Jim overhears that he is about to be sold to a man in New Orleans, separated from his wife and daughter forever, he decides to hide on nearby Jackson Island until he can formulate a plan. Meanwhile, Huck Finn has faked his own death to escape his violent father, recently returned to town. As all readers of American literature know, thus begins the dangerous and transcendent journey by raft down the Mississippi River toward the elusive and too-often-unreliable promise of the Free States and beyond.
While many narrative set pieces of “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” remain in place (floods and storms, stumbling across both unexpected death and unexpected treasure in the myriad stopping points along the river’s banks, encountering the scam artists posing as the Duke and Dauphin…), Jim’s agency, intelligence and compassion are shown in a radically new light.