Mark Twain in Paradise

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1867
1910
A01=Donald Hoffmann
America
Author
Author_Donald Hoffmann
Autobiographical Dictation
Bermuda
Bermuda Islands
Bermuda Scenes
Bermudian
Biographical
Biography
Category=DS
Category=DSRC
Category=WTL
Clemens
Comprehensive Study
Depth
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_travel
Fantasy Island
Henry H. Rogers
Historical
History
Hoffmann
Holy Land
Illustrations
Island Paradise
Isolated
Letters
Literary Biography
Mark Twain
Mary Peck
Narrative
Narrative Texture
Samuel Clemens
Scholarship
Socialism
Socialist
Socialite
Study
Topography
Travel
Travel Literature
Turn-of-the-Century
Twain
Upton Sinclair
Vacation
Voyage
Woodrow Wilson

Product details

  • ISBN 9780826221469
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: University of Missouri Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For Mark Twain, it was love at first landfall. Samuel Clemens first encountered the Bermuda Islands in 1867 on a return voyage from the Holy Land and found them much to his liking. One of the most isolated spots in the world, Bermuda offered the writer a refuge from his harried and sometimes sad existence on the mainland, and this island paradise called him back another seven times. Clemens found that Bermuda’s beauty, pace, weather, and company were just the medicine he needed, and its seafaring culture with few connections to the outside world appealed to his love of travel by water.

This book is the first comprehensive study of Clemens’s love affair with Bermuda, a vivid depiction of a celebrated author on recurring vacations. Donald Hoffmann has culled and clarified passages from Mark Twain’s travel pieces, letters, and unpublished autobiographical dictation—with cross-references to his fiction and infrequently cited short pieces—to create a little-known view of the author at leisure on his fantasy island.

Mark Twain in Paradise sheds light on both Clemens’s complex character and the topography and history of the islands. Hoffmann has plumbed the voluminous Mark Twain scholarship and Bermudian archives to faithfully re-create turn-of-the-century Bermuda, supplying historical and biographical background to give his narrative texture and depth. He offers insight into Bermuda’s natural environment, traditional stone houses, and romantic past, and he presents dozens of illustrations, both vintage and new, showing that much of what Mark Twain described can still be seen today.

Hoffmann also provides insight into the social circles Clemens moved in—and sometimes collected around himself. When visiting the islands, he rubbed shoulders with the likes of socialist Upton Sinclair and multimillionaire Henry H. Rogers; with Woodrow Wilson and his lover, socialite Mary Peck; as well as with the young girls to whom he enjoyed playing grandfather.

“You go to heaven if you want to,” Mark Twain wrote from Bermuda in 1910 during his long last visit. “I’d druther stay here.” And because much of what Clemens enjoyed in the islands is still available to experience today, visitors to Bermuda can now have America’s favorite author as their guide. Mark Twain in Paradise is an unexpected addition to the vast literature by and about Mark Twain and a work of travel literature unlike any other.
Donald Hoffmann is the author of numerous books, most recently Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan and the Skyscraper and Frank Lloyd Wright’s House on Kentuck Knob. He lives in Kansas City, Missouri.

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