Huck Finn Departure
A 100-year wait: Mark Twain's bitter memoirs are almost here
My college dormitory in Missouri was named for its native son and humorist, and he's always been one of my favorite satirists, so I'll be one of the first to order Mark Twain's forthcoming autobiography.
He died in 1910, but it took him a while to get a book deal.
Just kidding. Actually, the University of California, Berkeley, reportedly has more than 5,000 pages that will be divided into three volumes, given to them by Twain himself — with the stipulation that they remain unpublished until the 100th anniversary of his death. The University of California Press will publish the first volume in November.
I hope everyone is as eager to get their mitts on his memoirs as I am, but I'd remind those who associate Twain only with Huck Finn (and JTT) that Samuel Langhorne Clemens did not end his life a happy man. He suffered the deaths of his wife and two of his daughters and went through a long period of depression.
According to biographers (who've had access to the pages that have been kept in Berkeley vaults since Twain's death), he spent the last year of his life writing hundreds of pages full of vitriol he could no longer suppress. He takes aim at his mistress, Isabel Van Kleek Lyon, questions God and shares some perspectives on United States imperialism that would not have meshed well with his reputation as The Great American.
Says Robert Hirst, who is leading the Berkeley team editing the manuscripts: "There are so many biographies of Twain, and many of them have used bits and pieces of the autobiography. But biographers pick and choose what bits to quote. By publishing Twain's book in full, we hope that people will be able to come to their own complete conclusions about what sort of a man he was."