What would any Mark Twain book be without its flaws?
He was such a great writer but since he wasn't schooled in "how to write
the perfect 19th century novel" he almost never did. He was bursting
with ideas and tended to put 'em all down on paper. Many of his books
are uneven in tone, for example -- with some parts played for farce,
some for tragedy.
Sentence for sentence, I personally think he is as great a utilizer of
the English language as anyone I have ever encountered, dead or living.
But his novels typically aren't flawless.
Heck, AHF -- considered by so many his greatest work -- is arguably
flawed by all those lame chapters at the end when Tom Sawyer enters
stage center and turns Jim's freedom into one of his games. Most
readers find those sections quite a literary let-down.
I honestly think one that one thing that attracts so many of us to
Twain's works is that they are not perfect literary "works" but are
living and breathing with the humanity of the author -- so often, one
quite literally gets the feeling of being in Mark Twain's company when
reading his works -- and somehow to me the flaws are part of that
ongoing conversation.
When you mention the Bing Crosby movie, by the way, this makes me
contemplate what an excellent movie could be made of Conn Yankee
nowadays -- by one of today's directors specializing in dark, ironic,
post-modern film-making -- in contrast to the upbeat song-filled 1949
Hollywood version!
-Steve Hoffman
Takoma Park MD
David Davis wrote:
> It is a terrific work, although I seem to remember (what I perceived as)
> flaws. Grabbed a PDF from Google Books Search, re-reading starting
> yesterday.
>
> I wonder what Clara made of the Bing Crosby version? ;-)
>
> DDD
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Twain Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of L T
> Oggel/FS/VCU
> Sent: Sunday, September 06, 2009 1:24 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Conn Yankee
>
> Here's a piece from yesterday's Wash. Post that's perfectly timed for
> our
> recent/on-going discussion on Conn Yankee:
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/04/AR200909
> 0403802.html?referrer=emailarticle
>
> Henry Nash Smith's book on CYankee, Mark Twain's Fable of Progress, left
> a
> strong impression on me when I first read it, and it still does seem to
> hit the nail on the head. Smith's book, one of (few) literary studies
> that endures, might be old but it's not out of date, like the Twain book
>
> it examines. Smith's book is sub-titled, Political and Economic Ideas
> in
> A Connecticut Yankee.
>
> Terry Oggel
>
>
>
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