The recording that Edison made was destroyed in a fire at Edison Labs, in 1914 I think. While most of the known recordings of Twain's voice were destroyed, a few are simply "lost." The recording that survived the longest was in the possession of a collector in France and "lost" in WWII, so hope springs eternal. Amazingly, voice recordings survive of O. Henry, Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., Walt Whitman, and Jack London. Oddly, some modern authors may not be recorded --at least I've never heard any: Flannery O'Connor, Thomas Pynchon, J. D. Salinger. On the other hand, I think anyone who has heard the recordings of T. S. Eliot reading his own poetry will probably agree with me that voice recordings can be disappointing and we must be careful what we wish for. But a recording of Twain would not disappoint... Kevin Mac Donnell Austin TX