AUDIOBOOK

Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1

The Complete and Authoritative Edition

Mark TwainSeries: Autobiography of Mark Twain
4
(50)
Duration
24h 46m
Year
2011
Language
English

About

“I've struck it!” Mark Twain wrote in a 1904 letter to a friend. “And I will give it away—to you. You will never know how much enjoyment you have lost until you get to dictating your autobiography.” Thus, after dozens of false starts and hundreds of pages, Twain embarked on his “Final (and Right) Plan” for telling the story of his life. His innovative notion—to “talk only about the thing which interests you for the moment”—meant that his thoughts could range freely. The strict instruction that many of these texts remain unpublished for one hundred years meant that when they came out, he would be “dead, and unaware, and indifferent,” and that he was therefore free to speak his “whole frank mind.” The year 2010 marks the one hundredth anniversary of Twain's death. In celebration of this important milestone, here, for the first time, is Mark Twain's uncensored autobiography, in its entirety, exactly as he left it. This major literary event offers the first of three volumes and presents Mark Twain's authentic and unsuppressed voice, brimming with humor, ideas, and opinions, and speaking clearly from the grave, as he intended.

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Reviews

"Dip into the first enormous volume of Twain's autobiography that he had decreed should not appear until one hundred years after his death. And Twain will begin to seem strange again, alluring and still astonishing, but less sure-footed, and at times both puzzled and puzzling in ways that still resonate with us, though not the ways we might expect."
New York Times
"Mark Twain, always so blithely ahead of his time, has just outdone himself: he's brought us an autobiography from beyond the grave: a hundred-year-old relic that yet manages to accomplish something new. It anticipates the Cubism just taking form in Samuel Clemens' last years by exploding the confines of orderliness, sequence, the dutiful march of this-then-that. In so doing, it gives us not simpl
Ron Powers, author of Mark Twain: A Life
"Mark Twain dictated much of this book-now it is a book at last-from a big rumpled bed. Reading it is a bit like climbing in there with him."
Roy Blount, Jr., American author and humorist

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