|
||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mark TwainMississippi WritingsThe Adventures of Tom Sawyer • Life on the Mississippi • Adventures of Huckleberry Finn • Pudd'nhead Wilson
"I think it is time for a Mark Twain revival and so urge you to get the Library of America's volume Mark Twain: Mississippi Writings."
Katherine A. Powers, The Boston Globe Mark Twain is perhaps the most widely read and enjoyed of all our national writers. This Library of America collection presents his best-known works, together for the first time in one volume. Tom Sawyer is simply a hymn, said its author, put into prose form to give it a worldly air, a book where nostalgia is so strong that it dissolves the tensions and perplexities that assert themselves in the later works. Twain began Huckleberry Finn the same year Tom Sawyer was published, but he was unable to complete it for several more. It was during this period of uncertainty that Twain made a pilgrimage to the scenes of his childhood in Hannibal, Missouri, a trip that led eventually to Life on the Mississippi. The river in Twains descriptions is a bewitching mixture of beauty and power, seductive calms and treacherous shoals, pleasure and terror, an image of the societies it touches and transports. Each of these works is filled with comic and melodramatic adventure, with horseplay and poetic evocations of scenery, and with characters who have become central to American mythologynot only Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, but also Roxy, the mulatto slave in Puddnhead Wilson, one of the most telling portraits of a woman in American fiction. With each book there is evidence of a growing bafflement and despair, until with Puddnhead Wilson, high jinks and games, far from disguising the terrible cost of slavery, become instead its macabre evidence. Through each of four works, too, runs the Mississippi, the river that T. S. Eliot, echoing Twain, was to call the strong brown god. For Twain, the river represented the complex and often contradictory possibilities in his own and his nations life. The Mississippi marks the place where civilization, moving west with its comforts and proprieties, discovers and contends with the rough realities, violence, chicaneries, and promise of freedom on the frontier. It is the place, too, where the currents Mark Twain learned to navigate as a pilotan experience recounted in Life on the Mississippimove inexorably into the Deep South, so that the innocence of joyful play and boyhood along its shores eventually confronts the grim reality of slavery. Guy Cardwell (1906–2005), volume editor, was emeritus professor of English at Washington University in St. Louis. He was the author of numerous books and articles about Mark Twain.
Other volumes in the Library of America's edition of Mark Twain's collected works: Save $75 when you buy all seven Mark Twain volumes—and get a free book!
Copyright 1995–2011 Literary Classics of the United States, Inc. |
|
List price: $35.00
Web store price: $31.50
Free shipping in the U.S.
Phone orders: 1-800-964-5778
Request product #200057
Subscription Account Holders: Buy the cream-slipcased edition at the
Customer Service Center.
Booksellers/Libraries: LOA books are distributed worldwide by the Penguin Group.
ISBN: 978-0-94045007-3
1126 pages |