Life on the Mississippi Audiobook By Mark Twain cover art

Life on the Mississippi

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Life on the Mississippi

By: Mark Twain
Narrated by: Norman Dietz
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When Mark Twain was growing up, all he wanted to be was a steamboat man. And so Twain ran away in pursuit of his dream. Life on the mighty river for Twain consisted of paddleboats and history, poker games and gamblers, larger-than-life characters and outlandish festivals like Mardi Gras. Twain recorded it all with his keen eye for detail and biting wit.Public Domain (P)2004 Recorded Books Americas Art & Literature Authors Biographies & Memoirs Literary History & Criticism North America State & Local United States World Literature Funny Witty

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I found this book to be mostly fun to listen to, but there are some dead sections. The reader did a great job and helped to make it better. There are some good historical sections that made me glad I didn't give up on it.

Decent Listen

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This book got some bad reviews here, but I can't see why. The narrator was a champion storyteller and every word was clear. It's about an interesting time in American history, humorously told as the autobiography of a steamboat pilot.

Absolutely delightful

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The wild man from Hannibal who gave us Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn remembers (and revisits) his home town in this memoir written after he was rich and famous and no longer the kid that in his heart he always remained, at least partly. In making the journey, he tells about the geologic history of the Mississippi, about the geographic effects of the river, about the early days of steamboating on the river and the complexity of the task of moving a boat on a river that changed from hour to hour and day to day and was always ready to grab a boat and its passengers and pull them to muddy death. Any reader who enjoyed Tom and Huck owes it to himself to sample this wonderful story by a man who never wrote a bad sentence, although he was know for using bad language, i.e. profanity, at the drop of a cigar ash. I have listened to the recording twice, have read the book more than two times, and if I take a notion, I will do it again, regardless of the consequences, so little do I value sanity. (That was supposed to be humorous, but I really have listened twice and read twice....and I hope you do too.)

Humorous, poignant, informative, adventurous

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narrator changed for appendix and sounded very rushed, I decided to just read that, book is free from Gutenberg

mark twain at his best

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The narration is excellent and the story offers an interesting historical perspective of a unique period in American history. Still, the book is short on the wit and humor that mark many of Twain's other better books.

Not one of Twain's best

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