Idea 38 For a Books on Tape Mark Twain As an extension of the Mark Twain Project, we are thinking about a program of Mark Twain Books on Tape. These books could include the major novels -- it is especially desirable for modern readers to hear Adventures of Huckleberry Finn with its "Missouri negro dialect; the extremest form of the backwoods South-Western dialect; the ordinary 'Pike-County' dialect; and four modified varieties of this last," as Mark Twain wrote -- or might include a reading of the early Letters, including courtship letters to his fiancee Olivia Langdon. Samuel Clemens himself read his books to his family and his public performances were largely readings of his own works. A special reason to undertake the reading of the letters is that in these writings we come as close as we can to hearing Mark Twain speaking as himself, whereas in the works he is speaking in the voice of others, as it was his genius to be able to do. But how might this be accomplished? Who would do the readings? How would these tapes be published and distributed? Would there be a market for them? WILLIAM McCLUNG & JEFFREY STEINBRINK BERKELEY