Dear Ms Dorman:
I'm not a twain scholar, so there may be something out there, though I have
not seen it. I believe once, in surfing Amazon.com, I stumbled on a mystery
novel in which Twain was a detective with a famous Englishman as a partner,
but I have no way of tracking it down, if in fact my memory is not betraying
me. A name, the way, I have not seen mentioned in the Forum discussions of
MT impersonators is David Grant, a former schoolmaster in Vermont and
presently executive director of a New Jersey foundation. David is extremely
good.
I have been working on a novel about a fictitious Sam Clemens and double(?)
fictitious Huch Finn growing up together in Hannibal after Huck returns from
his trip down the Mississippi. I'd be happy to send you a sample if it would
be useful.
Best wishes
david hoopes
>From: Susan Dorman <[log in to unmask]>
>Reply-To: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Twain impersonators
>Date: Mon, 15 Mar 2004 08:49:18 -0500
>
>--Apple-Mail-1-119627559
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>
>Hello, I'm new to the list, and, seeing the thread on Twain
>impersonators, thought I would ask a question in a similar vein. Is
>there work out there in which Mark Twain figures as a fictional
>character? Has he been imitated on the page as well as acted on the
>stage? If so, where? What was the quality, what was the type of work?
>
>In conjunction with my Masters in humanities project, I did a creative
>dialogue with Mark Twain and another figure. I wanted to do something
>of a fantastic nature, not unlike the works these two giants. Now I'm
>wondering what else might be out there. And if so, how do you assess
>it?
>
>I'm also looking for markets for papers done in connection with the
>project (literary essays). Thinks in advance for any tips you may
>have..
>
>A nice place to lurk, this list. :-)
>
>Susan Dorman
>
>On Mar 8, 2004, at 12:44 PM, Joe McCullough wrote:
>
> > Hal Holbrook will also be appearing at the University of Nevada, Las
> > Vegas,
> > on May 22. I have the wonderful honor to introduce him for that
> > performance.
>-------
>I had a "technological meltdown" a while back and since have been
>unable to communicate much online (except briefly and very
>illiterately) because I have no voice recognition software on the
>machine. My dexterity is limited by disability. I have to transfer
>communication by CD if I want to send something online--cumbersome. I
>do all my work on an off-line machine now with the software. I guess
>the cut off from online communication has beefed up my productivity
>some, though. For that I'm glad..--sue
>
>--Apple-Mail-1-119627559
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>Content-Type: text/enriched;
> charset=US-ASCII
>
>Hello, I'm new to the list, and, seeing the thread on Twain
>impersonators, thought I would ask a question in a similar vein. Is
>there work out there in which Mark Twain figures as a fictional
>character? Has he been imitated on the page as well as acted on the
>stage? If so, where? What was the quality, what was the type of work?
>
>
>In conjunction with my Masters in humanities project, I did a creative
>dialogue with Mark Twain and another figure. I wanted to do something
>of a fantastic nature, not unlike the works these two giants. Now I'm
>wondering what else might be out there. And if so, how do you assess
>it?
>
>
>I'm also looking for markets for papers done in connection with the
>project (literary essays). Thinks in advance for any tips you may
>have..
>
>
>A nice place to lurk, this list. :-)
>
>
>Susan Dorman
>
>
>On Mar 8, 2004, at 12:44 PM, Joe McCullough wrote:
>
>
><excerpt>Hal Holbrook will also be appearing at the University of
>Nevada, Las Vegas,
>
>on May 22. I have the wonderful honor to introduce him for that
>performance.
>
></excerpt><fontfamily><param>Geneva</param><smaller><smaller>-------
>
>I had a "technological meltdown" a while back and since have been
>unable to communicate much online (except briefly and very
>illiterately) because I have no voice recognition software on the
>machine. My dexterity is limited by disability. I have to transfer
>communication by CD if I want to send something online--cumbersome. I
>do all my work on an off-line machine now with the software. I guess
>the cut off from online communication has beefed up my productivity
>some, though. For that I'm glad..--sue</smaller></smaller></fontfamily>
>
>
>--Apple-Mail-1-119627559--
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