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mcintire <[log in to unmask]>
Mon, 15 Mar 2004 16:44:33 -0600
text/plain (193 lines)
Hi, All,

The Mark Twain Mystery series is authored by Peter Heck...I
reviewed one for the Forum several years back. I thought at
the time that it was great fun, with just enough Twain
background to give a reader that "insider" feel...also I'm
in the process of reviewing "Shohola Falls" (oops, better
get back to that).  If those novels are of any interest to
you for your study, I'm pretty sure they are still
available,

Jan McIntire-Strasburg




 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
> >Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
> >Content-Type: text/plain;
> >         charset> >         formatūd
> >
> >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> >
> >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><smal
> ler>-------
> >
> >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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