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Life on the Mississippi (1883)

AUTHOR: Mark Twain
ISBN: 0486414264

SHORT DESCRIPTION: This brilliant book provides a rare glimpse into an important chapter in Mark Twain's life before he became the most popular humorist of his time. Recounting his days as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River, he offers a wide range of...

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         Editorial Review

Life on the Mississippi (1883)
- Book Review,
by Mark Twain

Book Description
The popular 19th-century humorist offers lively recollections ranging from his salad days as a novice steamboat pilot on one of the world’s greatest rivers to views from the passenger deck in the twilight of the river culture’s heyday. Engrossing and entertaining anecdotes by a peerless storyteller from a now-finished chapter of American history.


From the Publisher
8 1.5-hour cassettes


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         Book Review

Life on the Mississippi (1883)
- Book Reviews,
by Mark Twain

Life on the Mississippi (1883)

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The Mississippi River and Mark Twain are practically synonymous in American culture. Known as "America's river," the popularity of Twain's steamboat and steamboat pilots on the ever-changing Mississippi has endured prominently over the years.

Samuel Clemens became a licensed river pilot at the age of 24 under the apprenticeship of Horace Bixby, pilot of the Paul Jones. His name, Mark Twain, was derived from the river pilot term describing safe navigating conditions or "mark two fathoms". This term was shortened to "mark twain" by the leadsmen whose job it was to monitor the water's depth and report it to the pilot.

Although Mark Twain used his childhood experiences growing up along the Mississippi in numerous works, nowhere is the river and pilot's life more thoroughly described than in Life on the Mississippi.

WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING

Twain found zest and gusto-nouns that do not describe very much American literature of the first rank - in whatsoever was alive... A mere passerby, a casual of the river or a thug heard talking in a frowzy town, may reveal a whole personality in a few paragraphs... Boys, villagers, the rivermen, the Negroes - there is nothing quite like the Mark Twain gallery elsewhere in American literature. — Jonathan Lyons


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