Sam Clemens

An open discussion about books! Any kind of book -- fish books, fiction books, non-fiction -- anything! Whatever you've read that's made an impression, or that you think the rest of us might like -- tell us about it!

Sam Clemens

Postby Mark Stone on Sat Apr 23, 2005 12:48 pm

Since I was young I've always been interested in Mark Twain, especially books he wrote describing his journeys. The most fascinating is a book (the title escapes me now --) he wrote describing his travels through the "old west" with his brother when he deserted from the Confederate army in the 1860s:
War broke out. Trade on the river ceased, so I joined the confederacy; served for two weeks; deserted; and the confederacy fell.
Meeting Brigham Young, prospecting for gold, his commentary on the Mormon Church at that time, etc. There's a fascinating historical perspective. Anyone else like to read Mark Twain?

--Mark:cool:

ps -- You know I was named after Mark Twain. He was named in the 1800s, and I in 1953. I was named a long time after Mark Twain.
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Sam Clemens

Postby Deepseafisher on Sat Apr 23, 2005 5:09 pm

I was named after Mark Twain

LoL. Thats great.

Yeah, I like Twain's writing. We read Huck Finn for school. There's really something great about the way he writes, isn't there?
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Sam Clemens

Postby DanRad on Sat Apr 23, 2005 7:56 pm

Interesting thinker. Some great quotes:

"There are lies, there are damned lies, and there are statistics."
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Sam Clemens

Postby Mark Stone on Mon Apr 25, 2005 10:35 am

Originally posted by Deepseafisher
There's really something great about the way he writes, isn't there?
Twain's writing always seems to get to me emotionally. The real story why he deserted the confederate army and began his travels westward was that he killed a Union soldier. After he shot him, he came up and held the Union soldier's head as he died, and saw that he was a young man like him, with dreams and asperations, with family and loves, etc. After the soldier died in his arms, Twain could no longer stomach war. The description of that event always haunted me. BTW, the name of the book is "Roughing It" --
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