ABSTRACT

In the summer of 1876, Mark Twain started to write Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as a detective novel surrounding the murder of Huck’s father, Pap Finn. The case is unresolved in the novel as it exists today, but Twain had already planted the clue to the identity of the killer. It is not the various objects ostentatiously left around Pap’s naked body; they are not the foreground of the scene, but actually the background, against which a peculiar absence emerges distinctively—Pap’s boots, with a "cross" in one of the heels, are gone with his murderer.

The key to the mystery of Twain’s writings, as this book contends from a broader perspective, is also such an absence. Twain’s persistent reticence about the death of his father, especially the autopsy performed on his naked body, is a crucial clue to understanding his works. It reveals not only the reason why he aborted his vision of Huckleberry Finn as a detective novel, but also why, despite numerous undertakings, he failed to become a master of detective fiction.

chapter 1|19 pages

The Ur-Huckleberry Finn

chapter 2|26 pages

Huckleberry Finn Redux

chapter 3|30 pages

“The Carnival of Crime” and Cadavers

chapter 4|29 pages

Splits in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

chapter 5|24 pages

The Cave

chapter 6|27 pages

Two Patricidal Stories

chapter 7|20 pages

The Oedipal Huckleberry Finn

chapter 8|21 pages

The Seven Year War

chapter 9|26 pages

A Truce

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

“The Private History of a Campaign That Failed”