Mark Twain''s Literary Resources: A Reconstruction of His Library and Reading (Volume One)
English
By (author): Alan Gribben R. Kent Rasmussen
This first installment of the new multi-volume Mark Twains Literary Resources: A Reconstruction of His Library and Reading recounts Dr. Alan Gribbens fascinating 45-year search for surviving volumes from the large library assembled by Twain and his family. That collection of more than 3,000 titles was dispersed through impromptu donations and abrupt public auctions, but over the years nearly a thousand volumes have been recovered. Gribbens research also encompasses many hundreds of other books, stories, essays, poems, songs, plays, operas, newspapers, and magazines with which Mark Twain was demonstrably familiar.
Gribben published the original edition of Mark Twains Library in 1980. Hailed by the eminent Twain scholar Louis J. Budd as a superb job that will last for generations, the work nevertheless soon went out of print and for three decades has been a hard-to-find item on the rare book market. Meanwhile, over a distinguished career of writing, teaching, and research on Twain, Gribben continued to annotate, revise, and expand the content such that it has become his lifes masterwork. Thoroughly revised, enlarged, and retitled, Mark Twains Literary Resources: A Reconstruction of His Library and Reading now reappears, to greatly expand our comprehension of the incomparable authors reading tastes and influences.
Volume I traces Twains extensive use of public libraries. It identifies Twains favorite works, but also reveals his strong dislikesChapter 10 is devoted to his Library of Literary Hogwash, specimens of atrocious poetry and prose that he delighted in ridiculing. In describing Twains habit of annotating his library books, Gribben reveals his methods of detecting forged autographs and marginal notes that have fooled booksellers, collectors, and libraries. The volumes 25 chapters trace from various perspectives the patterns of Twains voracious reading and relate what he read to his own literary outpouring. A Critical Bibliography evaluates the numerous scholarly books and articles that have studied Twains reading, and an index guides readers to the volumes diverse subjects.
Twain enjoyed cultivating a public image as a largely unread natural talent; on occasion he even denied being acquainted with titles that he had owned, inscribed, and annotated in his own personal library. He convinced many friends and interviewers that he had no appetite for fiction, poetry, drama, or belles-lettres, yet Gribben reveals volumes of evidence to the contrary. He examines this unlettered pose that Twain affected and speculates about the reasons behind it. In reality, whether Twain was memorizing the classic writings of ancient Rome or the more contemporary works of Milton, Byron, Shelley, Dickens, and Tennysonor, for that matter, quoting from the best-selling fiction and poetry of his dayhe exhibited a lifelong hunger to overcome the brevity of his formal education. Several of Gribbens chapters explore the connections between Twains knowledge of authors such as Malory, Shakespeare, Poe, and Browning, and his own literary works, group readings, and family activities.
Volumes II and III of Mark Twains Literary Resources: A Reconstruction of His Library and Reading will be released in 2019 and will deliver an Annotated Catalog arranged from A to Z, documenting in detail the staggering scope of Twains reading.
book is one-of-a-kind, a monumental project, representing 45 years of research
scholarship of the book is impeccable, by writer internationally known in the Twain community
publisher has a much-publicized association with Alan Gribben; in 2011 we released the highly controversial NewSouth Edition of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, edited by Dr. Gribben
Twain is among our more popular 19th-century American writers, and works about him are often of literary interest