I am a bit surprised, and a little discouraged, that virtually nobody on the LIST has any ideas about scholarship dealing with Mark Twain's grief --especially with his reactions in the years after Susy died. Does this mean there is no coverage of this issue to be found !? I should confess there is one book called _The Grief Taboo_ by Pamela Boker in which several chapters cover this topic -- unsatisfactorily, in my view. Does anyone else know of this book? I would be interested in your opinions of Boker's basic theses there. Obviously, some of the biographies cover it as well. I think Andy Hoffman does a good job of discussing some aspects of the emotional trauma, particularly the historical details; Everett Emerson's bio considers how the grief affected some of Twain's specific writings of the period. The other books really do not have much to say. Again: why is that? One book on grief labels matters of emotional trauma asscoiated with grief to be a social taboo. Is that it? Does anyone have some further ideas on these questions? Harold K. Bush, Ph. D. Saint Louis University