Have you ever wondered why a single river could shape a nation-and a storyteller forever?

Life on the Mississippi is Mark Twain's unforgettable journey into the heart of 19th-century America. Before he became a celebrated author, Twain-then Samuel Clemens-was a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River, and this river would become the lifeblood of his writing.

Blending memoir with rich historical commentary, Twain revisits the river years later to chart its transformation-both literal and symbolic. Through encounters with gamblers, hustlers, runaway slaves, Civil War survivors, and fellow dreamers, Twain paints a vivid picture of a nation evolving through industry, expansion, and cultural change.

This is not a mere travel narrative-it's a meditation on progress, nostalgia, and the bittersweet flow of time. With Twain's signature humor and penetrating social insight, Life on the Mississippi stands as one of the greatest non-fiction works in American literature.

What You'll Discover in This American Classic:

  • An Insider's View of the Riverboat Era - Twain recounts life as a young steamboat pilot and the dangerous dance of navigating the river
  • A Time Capsule of 19th-Century America - From bustling cities to sleepy river towns, witness the rapid transformation of the American South and Midwest
  • Twain's Sharpest Humor and Human Insight - Laugh, reflect, and question as he skewers pretension and exposes hypocrisy
  • A Masterful Blend of Fact and Feeling - Memoir, reportage, travelogue, and prose poetry all in one
  • The Cultural Roots of Twain's Fiction - The groundwork for The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn is laid here

Whether you're a history buff, a Twain devotee, or a lover of lyrical storytelling, Life on the Mississippi is a powerful ride down the current of America's past-and one writer's personal tide of discovery.

Titel
Life on the Mississippi
Untertitel
A Vivid Blend of River Lore, Humor & Twain's Unforgettable American Odyssey
Übersetzer
EAN
9781806689354
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
19.10.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
0.8 MB
Anzahl Seiten
454