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(Compact Disc - Unabridged, 7 CDs, 8 hrs.)
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A companion audiobook to the 4-hour PBS television series.
From the authors of Jazz, Baseball, and The Civil War: a biography of one of the central figures of our literature—the American titan who gave us Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer, and Life on the Mississippi.
Using material from Twain's works, diaries, and letters, Mark Twain follows the great writer/humorist/lecturer/people's philosopher from the Hannibal, Missouri of his childhood, to the Europe and Middle East of his travels (and hilarious travel books); from his beginnings as a newspaperman to his storied life as (in his own words) "the most conspicuous man on the planet."
The essential companion audiobook to the upcoming public television series, Mark Twain also stands on its own as an enthralling biography.
In 1867, after successfully marketing accounts of his Mideast travels to several newspapers, Mark Twain wrote to his mother, "Am pretty well known now. Intend to be better known." But he could hardly have anticipated the meteoric rise that would rapidly make him America's most prominent citizen. Next January, Twain will be subjected to that conclusive proof of American significance, the Ken Burns documentary. The inevitable cross-merchandising will include this illustrated biography, which, happily, stands on its own merits as a fascinating account of Twain's extraordinary career. All Burns productions center on a good story, and this is a plain, very human tale: rags, riches, and the rest. The authors (Ward and Duncan are frequent collaborators with Burns) thoroughly examine Twain's disastrous business sense, his horrid temper, his unlikely courtship of the heiress Olivia Langdon, his climb out of bankruptcy at the age of 60, the loss of three of his four children, his global celebrity. Even amid tragedy, Twain could make a stone laugh, but it was his rare frankness in confronting racism, and the publication of the controversial Huckleberry Finn, that would secure his fame beyond national borders and his own time. As one might expect, the Burns team has done magnificent archival detective work and unearthed a treasure trove of rare Twain photographs. This should appeal to a vast potential readership eager to learn more about this manic, profound, daft and provocative mad genius of American culture. (Nov. 20) Forecast: Shelve this with The Annotated Huckleberry Finn (Forecasts, Sept. 10) and sales should soar during the holidays, even before the TV documentary airs. Copyright 2001Cahners Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsGeoffrey C. Ward is the author of twelve books, including A First Class Temperament, which won the 1989 National Book Critics Circle Award. He has written or co-written many documentary films, including Jazz, The Civil War, and Baseball.
Dayton Duncan is the author of five books and has been a consultant on many of Ken Burns' films, including Lewis & Clark, and was also the co-writer and consulting producer of the PBS series The West.
Ken Burns, the founder of Florentine Films, is a director, producer, and writer who has been making documentaries for more than twenty years. His work has won numberous prizes, including the Emmy and Peabody awards.
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January 29, 2002: Finally! A 'coffee table' book that has top-quality photos and an excellent text. MARK TWAIN: AN ILLUSTRATED BIOGRAPHY is a companion to a two-part, four-hour documentary film, directed by Ken Burns, on the life and work of Samuel Langhorne Clemens and his 'famously, irrepressibly rambunctious alter ego Mark Twain.' Ernest Hemingway once said that Twain is 'the headwater of American fiction' and called THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN 'the best book we've ever had. There was nothing before. There's been nothing as good since.' George Bernard Shaw referred to Twain as 'America's Voltaire.' William Dean Howells described Twain as 'incomparable, the Lincoln of our literature.' Susy Clemens once wrote of her father: 'He is known to the public as a humorist, but he has much more in him that is earnest than that is humorous. He is as much of a Philosopher as anything, I think.' In this reviewer's considered judgment, Twain is the greatest literary genius America has produced, a thinker of remarkable depth and substance. Twain's life was filled with many travels, adventures ... and tragedies. Born in 1835, when Halley's comet made its appearance, he lived for 75 years, until 1910, when Halley's comet returned. He survived, and suffered, the death of his beloved wife 'Livy' (Olivia Louise Langdon), and three of their children: Langdon, who died in infancy; Susy, who died of spinal meningitis at age 24; and Jean, who died of a heart attack evidently brought on by an epileptic seizure. 'The secret source of humor itself,' wrote Twain, 'is not joy, but sorrow. There is no humor in heaven. ... [Our] race, in its poverty, has unquestionably one really effective weapon--laughter. Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.' Laughter and sorrow: Twain was well acquainted with both. Known superficially to many admirers as merely a humorist or funny man, Twain was essentially, as he described himself, 'a moralist in disguise' who preached sermons to 'the damned human race.' Twain's literary corpus abounds with excoriating criticisms of racism, anti-Semitism, religious hypocrisy, governmental arrogance and imperialism, petty tyrants, and Philistine culture. His often deadpan humor bristles with barbed satire and withering sarcasm. In addition to its narrative text, this volume includes five bonus essays: 'Hannibal's Sam Clemens,' by Ron Powers; 'Hartford's Mark Twain,' by John Boyer; 'The Six-Letter Word,' by Jocelyn Chadwick; 'Out at the Edges,' by Russell Banks; and an interview with Hal Holbrook, 'Aren't We Funny Animals?' MARK TWAIN: AN ILLUSTRATED BIOGRAPHY is a rich and rewarding book.
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January 13, 2002: If you only read one biography in the next year, I suggest that you make it this one. Samuel Langhorne Clemens (a.k.a. Mark Twain) was ?torn between fame and family, between humor and bitterness, bottomless hunger for success and haunting fears of failure.? His own writing makes this volume sparkle. ?I am only human -- although I regret it.? ?Aw well, I am a great and sublime fool.? ?The secret source of humor itself is not joy, but sorrow. There is no humor in heaven.? ?Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.? His ability to capture the American vernacular on paper has never been equaled. Much of his best-known writing was based on Hannibal, Missouri where he lived from age 4 to 17, and visited only 5 times thereafter. The benefit of an illustrated biography for Mark Twain is that you can see the people and places he was describing, which adds to your enjoyment of those works and to a greater understanding of his craft. Tom Blankenship was a model for Huck Finn and Laura Hawkes inspired Becky Thatcher. Constantly on the move, Twain wrote about the places he visited to earn his living and you will learn a great deal from seeing contemporary photographs and illustrations of these sights from the western United States and Hawaii through to Europe and the Middle East. He also did a world-wide lecture tour in 1895 that is captured here. ?Livy? (Olivia Langdon) was the great love of his life, and you will be enchanted and touched by their letters. You will also enjoy learning about her role as editor (helping him avoid expressions that would offend almost everyone) and as muse (he wanted her to be proud of him). You will come away with many new impressions of Mark Twain. I came away from this book with a strong desire to read more of Mark Twain?s writing, and to see the PBS series for which this book is a companion. I am sure you will, too! Turn your sadness and setbacks into fertile soil for imagination and humor! Listen to all those around you, and share their lessons with the world! Donald Mitchell, co-author of The 2,000 Percent Solution and The Irresistible Growth Enterprise