About This Book
A literary critic examines Mark Twain's career, personality, and writings, focusing on his late-life pessimism and inner contradictions. Drawing on biographical episodes, private memoranda, and published works, the study interprets formative shocks and domestic pressures as shaping a divided sensibility between popular geniality and private despair. It analyzes his humor, letters, public persona, and attempts at respectability, situating them within American social change, and organizes the argument into themed chapters that trace stages of ambition, crisis, and aesthetic response.
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