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Paperback The Complete Essays of Mark Twain Book

ISBN: 0306809575

ISBN13: 9780306809576

The Complete Essays of Mark Twain

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Book Overview

Mark Twain is best known as one of this country's finest humorists and novelists. As this collection confirms, he was one of our finest essayists as well. Gathered here in a single volume, these pieces reveal the complete range of this esteemed American writer and contain some of his best, funniest, and most caustic work. "English as She Is Taught," "What Is Man?," and "Letters to Satan" are among the seventy-seven essays, each featuring Twain's witty,...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Amazing Collection, AMazing Author

As I have been searching for such a volume of essays, specifically by Mark, I finally came across one I really did enjoy. I, being a most powered reader, found this intriging and delightful to have in the home. His essays always put a smile on my face and I gave this as a gift to an english professor. They thanked me and also said how awesome of a collection it was. My favorite of all time "The Damned Human Race" of course is in, and I absolutely adore that. It is absolutely, and undoubtfully the most hilarious essay I have ever read. Thank you Mark Twain, and thank you for this awesome collection of his Writings.

When he is good

I do not know all or even most of the essays of this work. I do know that there are as with Twain tremendously humorous lines and passages. I know that for the reader there will be great pleasure in reading this work. As for the view of Man that is revealed in this work Twain I think is at times a bit narrow and ungenerous on one side, and over- sentimental on another. Yet considering the many sufferings he knew , the great financial and family difficulties he faced there is something winning in his remarkable feistiness and spirit. A great writer whose greatest writing is in his novels and especially ' Huckelberry Finn' there are nonetheless many brilliant insight and passages in this work .

Vintage Mark Twain

There has never existed a more witty writer than Samuel Clemens, our beloved Mark Twain. Everything the man has ever written, particularly as age sharpened his sense of irony, carries a most suave and acute style of point-of-view. Every observation, every poignancy, every comment he makes is exquisitely nailed down with a genius's flair for words. While some readers of today may find some of his essays antiquated and over-worded, all I can say is that this man possessed the finest intellect ever granted to a human being and was able to produce it on paper with a resounding flourish. Not to mention the finest humor also. I have read most books by and about Mark Twain and was thrilled to recently come across this collection of his works. Out of the essays he has written in this volume, "In Defense of Harriet Shelley" is my favorite. This essay is Mark's review of Professor Dowden's book titled "Life of Shelley". Ordinarily, I would never have heard of the poet Shelley's adultery while married to his first wife, Harriet, nor even cared if I had, but Mark, who reviewed many books of his era (including his hilarious upbraiding on the grammatically incorrect Fenimore Cooper's novels!) put it all in perspective for me - brought it right up to present time and concern, so to speak. Every sentence in that particular essay is loaded with vintage Twain-ism and he does so rightly defend Harriet that when you finish reading, you want to print a copy of it and post it everywhere in your own defense of Harriet as well! At least I felt that way. Other essays of note in this book are "Saint Joan of Arc", "Mental Telepathy" and "The Death of Jean", the latter particularly profound since Mark writes about the death of his daughter, Jean, who while visiting him, dies as a result of an epileptic stroke. The bereaved father began this essay on the eve of her death and finished it within scant days; thus this writing displays a desperate immediacy to it - outpourings of a heart lamenting it's disbelief and shock. We see and feel with the man here in his most vulnerable state, hoping perhaps to find in his own writing, some link to his now-dead child.This volume of essays was published in 1963 and I would love to see it reprinted again, updated with a catchy illustrated front cover, etc, (costs be damned) just to lure in a generation of readers who otherwise might never come across it.

Side-splittingly hilarious, yet...thoughtful.

Anyone who has read Twain will know that he has an unusually sharp wit and is one of the funniest men of ANY century; however, I wager that most do not perceive his grasp of issues important regardless of time, particularly the relationship of man to his (hypothetical) superiors, and human nature in general. With this book the best of both his worlds may be enjoyed: his humorous stance is in full effect in many of his hilarious essays; but the introspective character of his inner debates about man and God are also here preserved. It is recommended for anyone who wishes to see both sides of Twain's literature, and get a few belly laughs and deep thoughts while at it.
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