This is the story of Mark Twain's brief career as a Confederate soldier at the beginning of the American Civil War.
Mark Twain’s "private history" is told from the viewpoint of "someone who set out to do something in the war, but didn't.”
What starts out as a kind of class reunion/camping trip quickly becomes a series of frightful near misses with a determined and deadly foe, and ends in painful, premature death for some and a lifetime of guilty regrets for others.
Mark Twain invites us to witness real war first hand, in a time when men still looked one another in the eye in the final moment of battle.
This Mark Twain In Person Library recording is an approximation of Mark Twain's own voice, just as his family might have heard the story for the first time in the family library.
Author:
Mark Twain, born in 1835 in Missouri, is widely regarded as the Father of American Literature. His stories often exposed the Damned Human Race during the reign of the Slavery Industrial Complex brought him much fame--and infamy.
Narrator/Performer:
For over forty years, Richard Henzel has performed as Mark Twain in thousands of performances across the U.S., Canada, and Great Britain. His other audiobooks include Puddnhead Wilson, Huckleberry Finn, Those Extraordinary Twins, and Life on the Mississippi. |