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Nearly nine decades after his death, Mark Twain remains an international icon. His white-maned, mustachioed image is instantly identifiable throughout the world, the very picture of probity and high spirits (which explains why he's become the poster boy for products as diverse as beer, billiard tables, sewing machines, pizza, and real estate). Perhaps more importantly, Twain's books have retained all their power to amuse and enrage. How is it possible for the creator of a 19th-century "boy's holiday book" (Twain's own description of
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer) to raise so many contemporary hackles? The answer is that Twain
is a contemporary writer. Not, of course, from a chronological point of view--he was born in Missouri in 1835 and died in 1910 (having insisted that "annihilation has no terrors for me"). But Twain was the first writer to elevate the American vernacular to a high art. Sidestepping the starched-shirt diction of his peers, he created an idiom that resembled (but did not precisely duplicate) the wayward, slangy, ungrammatical music of American conversation. No serious reader of Twain will want to do without the
Oxford Mark Twain. This 29-volume leviathan includes not only the major works but also a treasure trove of essays and short pieces, many of them unavailable for decades. Throw in the introductions to each volume (by such heavyweights as
Toni Morrison,
Kurt Vonnegut,
Cynthia Ozick,
Gore Vidal,
George Plimpton,
Bobbie Ann Mason, and
Walter Mosley), as well as the original illustrations, and you've got the book bargain of the millennium.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.
Product Description
A tongue-in-cheek travelogue following in the tradition of the immensely popular Innocents Abroad in which Twain and his mysterious traveling companion Mr. Harris make their way through Germany and across the Alps into Italy.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.