Pudd'nhead Wilson

Author  Mark Twain
Pudd'nhead Wilson

Mark Twain’s darkest novel—about a master and slave switched at birth—combines a courtroom drama with a provocative fable about race and identity.

Twain’s plot is set in motion when a slave named Roxy exchanges her light-skinned son Chambers with her master’s baby, Tom. Roxy’s child, now known as Tom, grows up as a spoiled, privileged white man, who is horrified when Roxy tells him the truth. He nearly gets away with a vicious crime, but his downfall comes in the form of a clever, eccentric lawyer, nicknamed “Puddn’head” Wilson. Twain’s novel was the first to use fingerprinting to solve a crime, but its significance goes much further as an investigation into the nature of identity. When the two young men are…

$17.50
February 3, 2015
Select a Retailer:
The Island of Dr. Moreau Jane Eyre

Jane Eyre

Charlotte Bronte
Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Mary Shelley
All Quiet on the Western Front

All Quiet on the Western Front

Erich Maria Remarque
A Room of One's Own

A Room of One's Own

Virginia Woolf
Lady Chatterley's Lover

Lady Chatterley's Lover

D. H. Lawrence
The Best of Lupin

The Best of Lupin

Maurice Leblanc
Orlando

Orlando

Virginia Woolf
Sunset Gun

Sunset Gun

Dorothy Parker
The Scarlet Letter

The Scarlet Letter

Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Awakening and Selected Stories Boris Godunov, Little Tragedies, and Others To the Lighthouse

To the Lighthouse

Virginia Woolf
Men Without Women

Men Without Women

Ernest Hemingway
The Age of Innocence

The Age of Innocence

Edith Wharton