Over the years I have read a number of references to Mark Twain using a phonograph for various purposes. Usually, it is said that he dictated part of a book onto a phonograph record. In a book I remember reading by Hal Holbrook (can't remember the name) he says he studied either one or several phonograph records of Mark Twain's voice as he prepared himself to act the role on stage. If that is true (and I don't know why, but I doubt it is) then phonograph records of Mark Twain's voice existed at least into the late 1940s or early 1950s, possibly later. I've never seen any book document when and where Mark Twain might have spoken into a phonograph. And I've read in numerous places that no recordings of his voice are known to exist. Now, I have a hard time believing that anyone who KNEW he or she possessed a recording of that voice would have simply lost or destroyed that record. I know there was a fire at Edison's plant in the teens that destroyed a lot of valuable recordings, but if that destroyed the Mark Twain recording, then that would give the lie to Holbrook's statement. Does anyone have any factual information about when and where Mark Twain might have spoken into a phonograph to have his voice recorded? And what might actually have happened over the years to any such recordings? Do any books treat of this subject beyond the mere cursory mention of it? I have no hope that any recordings exist, but I would sure love to hear that voice if it were possible. Carl Carl J. Chimi Bloomsburg University