Shohola Falls is a 2003 novel written by Michael Pearson. The novel imagines the true story of Thomas Blankenship, the young man that Mark Twain reputedly based the character of Huck Finn upon in his novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In Shohola Falls, Mark Twain is set as an important character, the fictional reality aligned to the historical one.

Shohola Falls
Cover to the first edition
AuthorMichael Pearson
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherSyracuse University Press
Publication date
September 2003
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages224 pp (hardback edition)
ISBN0-8156-0785-7 (hardback edition)
OCLC52387857
813/.6 21
LC ClassPS3616.E255 S36 2003

Michael Pearson (born 1949) is the author of five books—besides Shohola Falls, he has written four works of nonfiction: Imagined Places: Journeys into Literary America (a NY Times Notable Book of 1991), A Place That's Known: Essays (1994), John McPhee (1997), and Dreaming of Columbus: A Boyhood in the Bronx (1999).

For a decade – from 1997-2006 – he directed the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. Now, he teaches nonfiction writing and American literature there.