I fell in love with this paperback book after buying a copy some years ago. Although it isn't really relevant to Mark Twain, I felt compelled to put it in _Critical Companion to Mark Twain_ (in the entry for _Pudd'nhead Wilson" on page 400). I especially like the illustration at the top of the cover because its woman--apparently meant to represent Roxy--looks a lot like a young Elizabeth Taylor. The man threatening her with a club is presumably the false Tom Driscoll, in the scene in which Roxy reveals she is his true mother. Note the cover caption: "The story of a sordid scandal that rocked a Mississippi River town." Not exactly an accurate description of the novel. The second illustration, at the bottom of the cover, is difficult to connect with its novel, _Connecticut Yankee_. The glamorous woman about to be burned at the stake is probably supposed to be the woman burned as a witch in chapter 35. However, she scarcely resembles the bedraggled person whom Hank Morgan describes: "This poor woman had been stoned until she hardly looked human, she was so battered and bloody. The mob wanted to burn her." Note, too, the caption for this picture: "The magnificent adventure of a man who went back in time in the days of witches and wenches." That statement is sort of relevant to CY, but perhaps it overstates the role of wenches in the story.