Dear Steve, Twain himself or his characters or his (actual or imagined) manuscripts appear in the following novels, stories and plays: *Jap Herron* (1917) by Emily Grant Hutchings *Return of Mark Twain* (1918) by Eunice Winkler *Murder Stalks the Circle* (1947) by Lee Thayer *God Bless U, Daughter* (1968) by Mildred Burris Swanson *Silas Timberman* (1954) by Howard Fast *The True Adventures of Huckleberry Finn* (1970) by John Seelye *The Fabulous Riverboat* (1971) by Philip Jose Farmer *1876* (1976) by Gore Vidal *A Bloodsmoor Romance* (1982) by Joyce Carol Oates *The Further Adventures of Huckleberry Finn* (1982) by Greg Matthews *The Day They Came to Arrest the Book* (1982) by Nat Hentoff *I Been There Before* (1985) by David Carkeet (my favorite of the bunch) *The Boys in Autumn* (play) (1986) by Bernard Sabath *Never the Twain* (1987) by Kirk Mitchell *Scavengers* (1987) by Yvonne Montgomery *Huckleberry Fiend* (1987) by Julie Smith *Twice Upon a Time* (1988) by Allen Appel *If I Never Get Back* (1990) by Darryl Brock *Death on the Mississippi* (1995) by Peter J. Heck *The Great Twain Robbery* (1995) by Robert Guntrum [I discuss all of the above in *Lighting Out for the Territory*(1997)] Other works I came across after my book came out include: "More than a Reader's Response: A Letter to De Ole True Huck" (1995) by Gerry Brenner *Tom's Lawyer* (2001) by Peter J. Heck *Test of Time* (2001) by Charles Harrington Elster [this imaginative time-travel adventure story that incorporates vocabulary from the SAT and the ACT is written by a former student of mine from Yale; it makes a good gift for high school students] "My Jim" (2006) by Nancy Rawles "Finn" (2007) by John Clinch All the best, Shelley