I just got a copy of this CD a few weeks ago and haven't spent very much time with it yet, but I was struck immediately by two things: that it has much more good material *about* Twain than I was expecting, and that it has far less of his writings than I was expecting. In particular, I was surprised to see that essays like "To the Person Sitting in Darkness," "A Defence of General Funston," "As Regards Patriotism," "Corn-Pone Opinions," "The Czar's Soliloquy," "King Leopold's Soliloquy," and others along that vein were not included. This body of writing is so under-represented on the CD that I think there must have been an intentional decision made to exclude them. Since it claims to have been developed with the "expert advice of many scholars and curators," I'm wondering if anyone on this list participated in its development and could explain the editorial decisions. There are also some other editorial concerns for Twain scholars (though not for most general readers) because of the reliance on Paine's texts. Compare, for example Paine's "The War Prayer" included on the CD from _Europe and Elsewhere_ with the version edited by Frederick Anderson in _A Pen Warmed-up in Hell_. Both versions are covered by the same intact copyright so permissions would not have prohibited using Anderson's more authoritative edition. I'm sure it's a useful CD but I also found very quickly that it is also has many limitations. Jim Zwick