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"Training" And Twain's Discovery Of Its Role In His Major Novels, Gary Dale Ervin
"Training" And Twain's Discovery Of Its Role In His Major Novels, Gary Dale Ervin
Masters Theses
Twain's career as a novelist began with The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Before that time he wrote pieces for newspapers and magazines and short stories. The success of Tom Sawyer inspired Twain to write further novels. The Adventures of Huckelberry Finn took seven years to compose, During that time, Twain was forced to face several pitfalls that often confront a writer. One of those pitfalls was a concept he called "training."
The training of an individual in effect is the raising of that individual--the instillation of values and beliefs in a person as he is raised. The process applies …