<p>In 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Chapters 16 to 20', readers find themselves at the heart of Mark Twain's most lauded work, amidst a critical juncture in young Huck's moral journey. Twain's use of vernacular language frames the narrative, grounding readers in the antebellum South and providing an authenticity that situates the novel within the American Realism literary movement. These chapters, rich in dialect and regionalism, lay the found...