Life on the Mississippi
By Mark Twain

Price: $2.60
Rating:
 
(1629 Ratings)
Categories: Classics, Undefined, History, Biographies, General Fiction, Literary Criticism & Collections, Travel
ISBN: 9781770457133, 9781412136273, 9780740818158, 9781582182629
Publisher: Books LLC, EbooksLib, PDM Classics, Digital Scanning Inc.
Language: English

Summary

Mark Twain was born Samuel Langhorne Clemens on November 30, 1835, in Florida, Missouri; his family moved to the port town of Hannibal four years later. His father, an unsuccessful farmer, died when Twain was eleven. Soon afterward the boy began working as an apprentice printer, and by age sixteen he was writing newspaper sketches. He left Hannibal at eighteen to work as an itinerant printer in New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Cincinnati. From 1857 to 1861 he worked on Mississippi steamboats, advancing from cub pilot to licensed pilot. Continue reading...

Bookmark and Share

Buy It Now: $2.60

Add to Cart


View your cart (0) »

Check out with PayPal

Helpful Customer Reviews

Life on the Mississippi

Matthieu
Matthieu (Toulouse, France) Thu Jan 01 2009 15:45
Dans ce premier tome, Twain relate son expérience de jeune aventurier qui se laisse aller au romantisme de considérer qu'il n'y a rien de plus noble que de devenir pilote de vapeur sur le Mississippi. S'ensuit le récit drolatique d'un apprentissage douloureux, avec de belles tranches de récit to...more...
Soren
Soren (San Jose, CA) Thu Jan 29 2009 00:46
I think I found this book back in middle school, but I picked it up again in a used book shop on my honeymoon. I now read it most nights before going to sleep. It's a classic American voice talking about a time that is no longer ... but what a time it is to learn about!
Dan
Dan (New York, NY) Tue Feb 03 2009 11:59
Twain has a great way of telling these little stories. The first half is about his experience as a riverboat pilot. The first chapter is really great. A kind of historical and geological survey of the Mississippi Valley. I really don't think there is this kind of writing going on today
Elisabeth
Elisabeth (The United States) Sat Jul 11 2009 14:39
I LOVED this book! Twain's (sometimes) complex humor is belly-laughing/mind-blowing, and he also throws in a horror story or two. The only thing some people might not like is the lack of a central plot...it's just a bunch of stories strung together, and probably many are autobiographical.
Patrick
Patrick (Ryan, IA) Mon May 24 2010 12:18
p.31 "All I desired to ask Mr. Bixby was the simple question whether he was ass enough to really imagine he was going to find that plantation on a night when all plantations were exactly alike and all of the same color. But I held in. I used to have fine inspirastions of prudence in those day...
Mary
Mary (The United States) Tue Jan 20 2009 17:18
I was interested in reading more of Twain as I realized I had not read anything beyond Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. I found this book fascinating as a first-hand account of the river, it's people and towns. I found it a little difficult at first to comprehend his style of writing but enjoyed it nonethe...more...
Larry
Larry (Seattle, WA) Thu Nov 20 2008 11:09
A fun personal and historical account of the days of Steamboats on the Mississippi. It is full of humorous anecdotes, personality profiles and place descriptions as only Twain could write them. It is a gloriously meandering first person account of 19th century America written by one of America's bes...more...
Robin
Robin (The United States) Fri Oct 03 2008 18:38
I did not have a great time reading this book. I almost hated it and was bored much of the time, yet I give it 3 stars because i also found many interesting things. This book is truly about the Mississippi River. How long it is, width in different places, history, uses and if you're actua...more...
Erik
Erik (Chicago, IL) Sun Jan 11 2009 03:31
I recall reading this edition on lazy mid-summer days in Michigan, sitting on what I've always thought of as Dad's chaise lounge on the many-windowed porch of his mother's cottage overlooking the lake. It is not my favorite Twain, though one must honor his love for his topic: the paddleboat steame...more...
Kimster
Kimster (Denver, CO) Sat Jun 13 2009 23:35
I read this book after a trip to Hannibal Missouri. We toured the Riverboat Museum there and I was enthralled with the Mississippi River and wanted to know what would drive a young author to want to be a riverboat captain. I found myself wanting to board a river boat and ride it from the great lake ...more...