
At forty, the author reached a point many thought marked the height of his public life. His name was on every lip, his quips and stories quoted as if they were folk wisdom, and his reputation seemed to loom like a permanent fixture in American culture. Yet beneath the dazzling fame, the biography shows a man still hungry for new challenges and intellectual growth.
The volume opens with a lively portrait of the endless stream of letters that flooded his desk—petitions from politicians, aspiring writers, inventors, and even eccentric aristocrats asking for advice, endorsements, or simply a witty line. Through vivid anecdotes—like the curious gift of an old pepper‑box revolver and the fanciful invitations from a British bird‑collector—the narrative reveals Twain’s sharp humor and his willingness to entertain the oddball requests that defined his daily life. Readers get a sense of how his fame turned ordinary correspondence into a kaleidoscope of human hopes, oddities, and the relentless demand for his unmistakable voice.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (475K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2001-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1861–1937
Best remembered as Mark Twain’s close friend and biographer, he also wrote lively travel books, children’s stories, humor, and verse. His work moves easily between literary history and a warm, adventurous storytelling style.
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