Mark twain elementary school
REVIEW
Susan Aller. Mark Twain: A & E Biography.
Lerner Publications, Softcover, x Pp. $
ISBN
The following review appeared 5 September on the Mark Twain Forum.
© Mark Twain Forum
This review may not be published or redistributed in any medium without permission.
Reviewed by:
Dave Thomson
Commissions are donated to the Mark Twain Project
Susan Bivin Aller's biography Mark Twain is one of thirty-five books in a series of A&E publications covering the lives of politicians, athletes, show business luminaries, and famous authors including Edgar Allan Poe, Jack London, Jane Austen, Louisa May Alcott and Maya Angelou.
Aller's contribution to this series is a biography of Mark Twain aimed at young readers in grades 6 through Aller's treatment of the life of Samuel Clemens follows a Horatio Alger theme of the rags to riches success story. Mark Twain: A & E Biography consists of seven chapters, a bibliography, index, numerous photos and illustrations.
Also included are four single page excerpts from Roughing It (the Pony Express sequence); The Celebrated Jumping Frog; The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (the introduction of Huck Finn); and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (the "kings is mostly rapscallions.")
Aller introduces her reader to Sam Clemens with a Dickensian approach of young Sam, the printer's devil, living under deprived circumstances in the office of Joseph Ament's Missouri Courier in Hannibal.
And in one of the first failings at historical accuracy, Aller's caption under the daguerreotype of young Sam, the printer's devil, incorrectly identifies the compositor's stick containing the letters SAM as a "belt buckle (p. 6)." The error of misidentification of the picture is not uncommon but it serves as a warning sign that Aller's book will lack a measure of credibility.
Aller documents Clemens' career as a steamboat pilot in a Chapter titled "Pilot on the Proud Mississippi." Aller tells her readers that when the Paul Jones left Cincinnati, Horace Bixby was nursing a sore foot and that is why Sam spelled him as steersman during much of the trip to New Orleans.
Bixby is characterized as having "an explosive temper and expected perfection" from his cubs (p.
Mark twain a&e biography This minute video from the A&E Biography series does the job well considering the brief running time. The format is very similar to documentary filmmaker Ken Burns' style in that there are very few recreated scenes using actors to represent Mark Twain.35) adding that he was "a hard taskmaster, furious when his cub made mistakes (p. 37)."
Aller chronicles Clemens' trip in to the Sandwich Islands and his meeting with U.S. minister to China Anson Burlingame who advises the young journalist to "Seek companionship among men of superior intellect and character Never affiliate with inferiors; always climb (p.
51)."
Continuing to follow the Burlingame lead, Aller follows the voyage of the Quaker City across the Atlantic wherein Sam meets cultivated matron Mary Fairbanks and a young heir to a prosperous coal business named Charles Langdon whose miniature portrait of his sister Olivia attracts Sam's attention.
In this rags to riches portrait, Aller describes Clemens' marriage to Livy and the building of their Hartford home financed "in large part with (her) inherited fortune" which brings a "gilded life" to the boy "who had grown up in poverty. The boy who had never seem a display of affection in his family had become a young father, sharing embraces with his wife and daughters The rough Westerner with only a grade-school education was an honored member of the literary and cultural elite of the East Coast (p.
Mark twain middle school Featuring rare photographs, expert interviews, and excerpts from the stories that made him a legend, MARK TWAIN: HIS AMAZING ADVENTURES explores the life and legacy of the extraordinary man whose work gave American literature its voice.73)."
Clemens' visit to Hannibal is chronicled but Aller fails to mention that it was one of many stops on a steamboat tour of the length of the Mississippi River to stimulate memories and gather fresh material for writing Life on the Mississippi. His ruinous investment in the Paige typesetter is underplayed while the stock market crash of and subsequent financial crisis is blamed for his bankruptcy.
Clemens' last visit to Hannibal in is not mentioned. The deaths of Susy and Livy are briefly chronicled in a chapter titled "Thunder-Strokes." Jean's death is included in the last chapter "Final Harvest" six paragraphs prior to Clemens' own death.
Aller's major errors in Mark Twain: A & E Biography stem from her inability to distinguish between fact and fiction in Mark Twain's works--particularly in the adventures of fictional characters Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn.
Aller's unsubstantiated claims gleaned from The Adventures of Tom Sawyer include:
- Tom Blankenship, (who served as Clemens' model for Huck Finn) "knew how to cure warts with dead cats (p. 23)" and had a "violent father (p. 76)."
The facts reflect that Woodson Blankenship was recalled by Clemens in his Autobiography as being the second official Town Drunkard, preceded by General Gaines and succeeded by Jimmy Finn, but Woodson was never characterized by Clemens as "violent." - Sam sneaked out at night in answer to catcalls from Tom and others and "a lot of thenighttime adventures took place in the cemetery (p.
23)."
Mark twain a connecticut yankee Mark Twain was an American humorist, novelist, and travel writer. Today he is best remembered as the author of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer () and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (). Twain is widely considered one of the greatest American writers of all time.
This assumption is apparently based on Tom and Huck witnessing the grave robbing and murder in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. - The fictional episode of Tom and Becky getting lost in the cave "wasn't far from the truth of what had really happened to Sam and Laura (Hawkins)(p. 70)."
While Clemens did mention getting lost in the cave in his Autobiography he only specified that his companion was "a lady" but not her identity. Harold Speakman quoted Laura (Hawkins) Fraser in Mostly Mississippi (): "I was never lost in the cave, and I never went in alone with anyoneMr.Clemens was mistaken about that."
(Even Laura must have been convinced that Clemens meant everything that Becky did in the novel was something she herself was supposed to have done in actuality.) - Aller contends that the murderer Injun Joe was invented "to give the book its rousing climax (p. 70)."
Perhaps she remembered the "rousing climax" of the Selznick film version where Victor Jory as Joe plummets to his death in a chasm within the cave rather than the far less rousing version of Joe's death in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer where he is found starved to death just inside the recently sealed entrance to the cave.
One of the attractions of Mark Twain: A & E Biography are the twenty-eight illustrations and photos; several of them sharp, clear black and white reproductions of photos I have never seen before including one of Clemens with Josh Billings and Petroleum V. Nasby in an alternate pose that is superior to the one that is commonly published.
Thirteen photos are credited to the Mark Twain House in Hartford; six are from the Mark Twain Papers; and the remainder from various sources.
Mark twain a tramp abroad
Featuring rare photographs, expert interviews, and excerpts from the stories that made him a legend, MARK TWAIN: HIS AMAZING ADVENTURES explores the life and legacy of the extraordinary man whose work gave American literature its voice.Illustrations range from bird's eye views of Hannibal and Virginia City to a Currier and Ives steamboat race.
The front cover photo of the soft cover book is a mirror image of the seated Twain in his white suit with his fingers interlaced. Whether the reversal of the photo was accidental or intentional remains in question.
The back cover has a striking small portrait of Twain at Saranac Lake from
Aller's mini-biography states she lives in West Hartford and is active in programs at the Mark Twain House.
Mark twain middle school brooklyn ny: This minute video from the A&E Biography series does the job well considering the brief running time. The format is very similar to documentary filmmaker Ken Burns' style in that there are very few recreated scenes using actors to represent Mark Twain.
Her previous writing efforts have included a young adult biography of J. M. Barrie, creator of Peter Pan. Aller has done a creditable job in condensing the complex and eventful life of Samuel Clemens into a brief introduction which one hopes would stimulate young readers to explore further the life and writings of Mark Twain.
A&E's fifty minute Mark Twain television biography produced in does not appear to have been the basis for the content of this book.