TY - BOOK AU - Fishkin,Shelley Fisher TI - The Mark Twain anthology: great writers on his life and works T2 - The Library of America SN - 1598530658 : PY - 2010/// CY - New York, N.Y. PB - Library Classics of the United States, Inc., Distributed to the trade by Putnam Group KW - Twain, Mark, N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Come Back to the Raft Ag'in, Huck Honey! (1948); Leslie Fiedler --; Introduction to Huckleberry Finn (1950); T. S. Eliot --; Huck and Oliver (1953); W. H. Auden --; Twentieth-Century Fiction and the Black Mask of Humanity (1953); Ralph Ellison --; Yarn-Spinner in the American Vein (1957); Wallace Stegner --; Twain in the Slums (1959); Mike Gold --; from; Mark Twain on the Bed of Procrustes (1959); Yan Bereznitsky --; from; The Question Is Significantly More Profound: A Letter to Charles Neider (1960); Yan Bereznitsky --; from; Mark Twain: Exposer of the "Dollar Empire" (1960); Lao She --; Mark Twain and Sholem Aleichem (1963); Edward Field --; from; Mark Twain in America (1963); Abel Startsev --; From An American Traveler's Dreams - Huckleberry Finn Who Goes to Hell (1966); Kenzaburo Oe --; from; The True Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1970); John Seelye --; Last Laugh (1978); Robert Penn Warren --; Huck Finn, Alive at 100 (1984); Norman Mailer --; from; I Been There Before (1985); David Carkeet --; from; Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist (1989); Chuck Jones --; Introduction to How to Tell a Story and Other Essays (1996); David Bradley --; Introduction to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1996); E. L. Doctorow --; Introduction to Mark Twain's Speeches (1996); Hal Holbrook --; Introduction to 1601 and Is Shakespeare Dead?: "Deliberate Lewdness" and the Lure of Immortality (1996); Erica Jong --; Introduction to The Diaries of Adam and Eve: Reading Young, Reading Old (1996); Ursula K. Le Guin --; Introduction to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1996); Toni Morrison --; Introduction to Following the Equator and Anti-Imperialist Essays (1996); Gore Vidal --; Some Comments on Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Kurt Vonnegut at the Age of Seventy-Two (1996); Kurt Vonnegut --; from; What's Up with Mad Mark Twai; Twain Matters: A Sampler --; from; New Books (1869); David Ross Locke --; Memoranda: An Entertaining Article (1870); Mark Twain --; from; Les Humoristes Américains: Mark Twain (The American Humorists: Mark Twain) (1872); Thérèse Bentzon --; from; Mark Twain: Ein Amerikanischer "Humorist" (Mark Twain: An American "Humorist") (1880); Eduard Engel --; from; Mark Twain (1897); Eduard Engel --; Mark Twain on the Mississippi (1883); Lafcadio Hearn --; from; Escenas Norteamericanas (North American Scenes) (1884, 1890); José Martí --; from; Mark Twain (1884) / Henry Gauthier-Villars --; Mark Twain's Latest (1890); Hamlin Garland --; An Interview with Mark Twain (1890); Rudyard Kipling --; On the Art of Mark Twain (1891); Andrew Lang --; from; Mark Twain in Paris (1894); Theodor Herzl --; Mark Twain: An Inquiry (1901); William Dean Howells --; from; Prólogo: Mark Twain, Cuentos Escogidos ( Prologue to Mark Twain: Selected Tales) (1903); Ángel Guerra --; from; L'Umorismo Americano: Mark Twain (American Humor: Mark Twain) (1905); Livia Bruni --; Letter to Samuel L. Clemens (1907); George Bernard Shaw --; Books Bound in Red (1910); Marina Tsvetaeva --; Mark Twain (1910); Johannes V. Jensen --; Mark Twain as Our Emissary (1910); George Ade --; Mark Twain (1910); G. K. Chesterton --; from; Mark Twain (1910); Jesús Castellanos --; Mark Twain Protests (1916); George Soule --; from; Mark Twain (1919) / H. L. Mencken --; from; Sholem Aleichem and Mark Twain: Notes on the Eighth Anniversary of Sholem Aleichem's Death (1924); Maks Erik --; Our Mark Twain (1929); Helen Keller --; from; A Short Introduction to "Eve's Diary" (1931); Lu Xun --; Una Vindicación de Mark Twain (A Vindication of Mark Twain) (1935); Jorge Luis Borges --; Mark the Double Twain (1935); Theodore Dreiser --; from; The Negro in American Fiction (1937); Sterling Brown -- N2 - Brings together the words of over 60 writers, from Twain's earliest reviews to today, probing the many facets of his incomparable humor, his revolutionary use of vernacular language, his exploration of the realities of American life, and his fearless opposition to the injustices and outrages of an imperialistic age ER -