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Loading... Mark Twain : Mississippi Writings : Tom Sawyer, Life on the Mississippi,…
LibraryThing recommendations | |
- Mark Twain : Historical Romances : The Prince and the Pauper / A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court / Personal Re by Mark Twain
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- Edgar Allan Poe : Poetry and Tales (Library of America) by Edgar Allan Poe
- Speeches and Writings, 1859-1865 by Abraham Lincoln
| - The gilded age and later novels by Mark Twain
- Uncle Tom's cabin, or, Life among the lowly ; The minister's wooing ; Oldtown folks by Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Speeches and Writings, 1832-1858 by Abraham Lincoln
- Herman Melville : Redburn, White-Jacket, Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
- Typee, Omoo, Mardi by Herman Melville
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LibraryThing members' description |
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0940450070, Hardcover)
Here for the first time in one volume are the most famous and characteristic of Mark Twain's works. Through each of them runs the powerful and majestic Mississippi. The river represented for Twain the complex and contradictory possibilities in his own and the nation's life: the place where civilization's comforts meet the violence and promise of freedom of the frontier. It was the place, too, where Twain's youthful innocence confronted the grim reality of slavery. The nostalgic re-creation of childhood in "Tom Sawyer"--"simply a hymn put into prose form to give it a worldly air," said Twain--and the richly anecdotal memoir of his days as a riverboat pilot in "Life on the Mississippi" give way to the realism and often dark comedy of "Huckleberry Finn" and the troubled exploration of slavery in his mystery, "Pudd'nhead Wilson." Together, these four books trace the central trajectory of his life and career, and they can be read as a single masterpiece.
(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 25 Aug 2008 18:46:24 -0400) (see all 2 descriptions)
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