Mark TwainOxford University Press, 2004 M10 1 - 144 pages Mark Twain towered above the American literary landscape. With a worldwide fame greater than that of statesmen, scientists, or entertainers, Twain was in his own words "the most conspicuous man on the planet." Now, in this wonderful recounting of his career, Larzer Ziff offers an incisive, illuminating look at one of the giants of American letters. Mark Twain emerges in this book as something of a paradox. His humor made him rich and famous, but he was unhappy with the role of humorist. He satirized the rapacious economic practices of his society, yet was caught up in those very practices himself. He was a literary genius who revolutionized the national literature, yet was unable to resist whatever quirky notion or joke that crossed his mind, often straying from his plot or contradicting his theme. Ziff offers a lively account of Twain's early years, explores all his major fiction, and concludes with a consideration of his craftsmanship and his strength as a cultural critic. He offers particularly telling insight into Twain's travel writings, providing for example an insightful account of Following the Equator, perhaps Twain's most underrated work. Throughout the book, Ziff examines Twain's writings in light of the literary cultures of his day--from frontier humorists to Matthew Arnold--and of parallel literary works of his time--comparing, for example, A Connecticut Yankee with major utopian works of the same decade. Thus the book is both a work of literary criticism and of cultural history. Compact and sparkling, here then is an invaluable introduction to Mark Twain, capturing the humor and the contradictions of America's most beloved writer. |
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achievement admired adventures Albert Bigelow Paine Alta California American Claimant appeared Arnold’s Artemus Ward backwoods boyhood California career century character Charles Farrar Browne Civil Clemens Colonel com comic con Connecticut Yankee Cooper’s critical culture death dis Emerson England essays example fame fictions Following the Equator funny Gilded Age Hank Morgan Hank’s Hartford Hawthorne Huck Huck’s Huckleberry Finn human humor humorist imagination Innocents Abroad journey Jumping Frog King Arthur’s lecture letters literary literature living Mark Twain Mississippi murder narrator narrator’s nature Nevada never newspaper nineteenth-century novel Pauper per person pilot plot political popular pre Prince prose pub published Pudd’nhead Wilson reader reality river Roughing Roxy Sam Clemens satire Sawyer says sense sketches slave slavery Smiley social South speaker speech steamboat story subscription tale theme Theodore Dreiser things tion Tom Sawyer Tom’s tour Tramp Abroad travel book twin visited William Dean Howells writing wrote York