Dear fellow students of Mark Twain-- I am a graduate student at Virginia Commonwealth University who is writing a paper on Mark Twain that examines his readership. I'm in the early stages of my work, and at this point I am aiming at developing a composite "sketch" of the typical American reader (I'm not going to try to include European or worldwide readers) and show the links between Twain's instincts about or knowledge of his audience and how that affected his character developments, the moral positions of his fiction, and other features of his writing. I will be looking at Louis Budd's Our Mark Twain, Charles L. Webster's Mark Twain Businessman, Beverley David's two volumes of Mark Twain and His Illustrators, and Larzer Ziff's new book Mark Twain as well as representative Twain fictions like "Hadleyburg" (as a town whose inhabitants might be said to reflect Twain's perception of his audience). I'll also be using interviews of Twain (using Budd's compilation) along with the demographic evidence from several literary magazines like "Harper's (Weekly, Monthly, and Bazar)," "Cosmopolitan," "Century," and New American Review" as they were journals in which much of his work was published. As this is a topic that has not (to my knowledge) been studied directly in and of itself, I would appreciate any guidance Forum members might give me toward scholarship that I should include or any other ideas about what I should consider. Thanks very much. Courtney Fenner