
A seasoned riverboat pilot looks back on the Mississippi with the keen eye of a storyteller, weaving together the sights, sounds, and characters that defined a life on America’s great waterway. The narrative drifts from bustling river towns to quiet, moonlit nights, capturing both the humor of daily work and the deeper currents that shape a man’s memories. Twain’s voice is conversational yet vivid, inviting listeners to feel the river’s pulse as if they were standing on deck beside him.
One memorable episode centers on a childhood recollection of a tragic mishap at a small frontier jail, where a drunken man meets a fiery end and the narrator wrestles with an uneasy sense of responsibility. A tense midnight conversation with his younger brother turns the memory into a moral puzzle, probing the fine line between accident and culpability. The passage blends suspense, youthful anxiety, and Twain’s characteristic wit, offering a glimpse into the formative moments that linger long after the river’s roar fades.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (130K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-07-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1835–1910
Best known for bringing the Mississippi River, small-town America, and sharp humor vividly to life, this American writer turned everyday speech into unforgettable literature. Under the pen name Mark Twain, Samuel Langhorne Clemens became one of the most famous and most quoted authors of the 19th century.
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