Sunday, May 30, 2010

Better late than never


Mark Twain will be releasing a tell all book about his life 100 years after his death. This is like a literary time capsule. He felt that if it was released any earlier, it would have hurt his image. From Newser:

(Newser) – A century after his death, Mark Twain remains a master at stirring up interest in his books: It was the author's dying wish that his lengthy and revealing autobiography not be published until 100 years after his death—which happens to be this year. The 5,000 pages he left behind detail Twain's ill-fated affair with his secretary, his doubts about God, and his criticism of US imperialism in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines, the Independent reports.
Many think the reason for the hundred-year delay in publication is that Twain's privately held views would have hurt his public image—and his friends. "He spent six months of the last year of his life writing a manuscript full of vitriol, saying things that he'd never said about anyone in print before. It really is 400 pages of bile," a historian said of the last section of the manuscript. The first volume of the eventual trilogy will be published in November by the University of California, Berkeley.

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