Are you only interested in the anti-Christian thoughts? Or also the pro-Christian thoughts and the quasi-Christian, pseudo-Christian, somewhat-Christian, frequently-but-sometimes-not-Christian, and the decidedly hypocritical-Christian thoughts? I suggest it is best to work this issue from all sides. I believe it is a problem to think of Twain as merely "anti-christian"--whatever you might mean by that term. For example, several of Twain's characters are modelled on Joe Twichell--as in Tramp Abroad--and he certainly loved and admired Joe. Also, we should distinguish between the Christianity of, for instance, the Widow Douglas and Miss Watson in AHF, right? It is also probably wrong to take the pessimism and nihilism of the last 14 years or so and project it backwards onto the major works of fiction, willy-nilly. Check out my footnotes in the _Historical Guide to MT_ (Oxford) for a sense of the rather intimidating amount of materials on these topics. Harold K. Bush Saint Louis University