Short Story Review, “A True Story” by Mark Twain
What a beautiful story! It’s come down to me from my dad’s book in the library where all the fun and magic in his fandom for books go along. Future, as bright as it is, also has shades of grey in the dark lady’s eyes because her expressions are given in a complicated tone she’s worked up for on personal elements between slavery and freedom; in fact, a lot of her freedom is related to the slavery she got involved with. Oppression with whatever form that is taken can become a thing of the past towards the fresher liberty before us. There’s a bad amount of racism in her life which she uses to disguise her wit into gross charm, something Southerners may share as far as war and revolution are concerned. Different shades of grey exist between the North and the South and more generations overtime prove what they’re worth, as the proof of religions is in the nature around us, at whatever nook and cranny where differences arise on our mark to get set and go. But let’s talk more about racism in this book opinion I’m giving. Racism isn’t that universal- for that matter, cultures have existed to compete against each other or work together for tasks along the lines of prejudice, hatred, and wild action. A lot of evolution has resulted in racism because of the Bible since it’s a “book of books” for a “king of kings”. Hatred is often promoted in some fashion by great thinkers worldwide although they may describe it as “truth” or “faith” from all of the back-coding, that I’ve discussed about on liberals and am now referring to political lineages imagined for history with. Twain’s story is about family life and how it brings miracles we probably don’t have joy in due to confusion. Discrimination in Twain’s day revolved around preconceived notions connected to time and money all in a four-circle between the yearly seasons, as greatness in language could ruin faith naturally from the mist people shared out of suspicious bounds. Yet there’s only so much education to be had from this story even if you’ve been to so many schools. Specifics here and there in the story get muffled through the lady’s visions as expressed in dialect and privilege of social life given to the take, odds at ends for her encounter towards Clemens and the general house infrastructure they’re at. Don’t correct my grammar too much while reading or else you’ll lose understanding of my argument. Besides, would you correct that beautiful, wise, active lady? At times when people give funny words or express normal words in funny fashion, there’s chaos, enough drama and conflict to add onto the magic assumed for vision under the stars where even lies can be exaggerated into possible truths, as written in “A True Story”.
https://youtu.be/S5XWWcfZZJU
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