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Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven (Oxford Mark Twain)

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Title: Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven (Oxford Mark Twain)
by Mark Twain, Frederik Pohl, Shelley Fisher Fishkin
ISBN: 0-19-510157-X
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Pub. Date: December, 1996
Format: Hardcover
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $22.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4 (2 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 3
Summary: A light little satire
Comment: "Report from Paradise" is Mark Twain's last published book and it took him over forty years to finish it. It has also been reported that it was the only story Twain aka Samuel Clemens actually enjoyed writing.

Twain's description of the afterlife as seen through the eyes of a sailor is quite original and there are many interesting aspects to Twain's at times taunting writing, with clear implications to social criticism tetectable.

"Report from Paradise" is a short and light read, and despite it's many inconsistancies it manages to relay a fun quality to it with the expence of blindly followed religious beliefs and ways of thinking.

Rating: 5
Summary: An ounce of Twain is worth a pound of Handbook of the Soul
Comment: Tired of tedious, if earnest, pseudo-philosophizers who will give you all the secrets of universal happiness in ten minutes a day? Tired of smug pulpit-pounders who somehow, while still human, seem to "know" as much as any divinity you can think of? Then it's time to spend an hour with Mark Twain. Come on: you haven't given the old guy a minute since you had to read "Huckleberry Finn" in high school or college, and it's about time you did. Captain Stormfield's "Extract" is just the tonic your overburdened soul needs. Stormfield's heaven seems to let everybody in, and to do its best to fulfill every one of their dreams, until-- you guessed it--their expectations conflict. How can Moses, for example, be expected to greet every faithful Jew, Christian and Muslim, with hugs and kisses without 1] getting soaked with slobber, and 2] getting disgusted with his lack of free time? "[The patriarchs] are kind and gentle old Jews, but they ain't any fonder of kissing the emotional highlights of Brooklyn than you be." Enough said.

Similar Books:

Title: The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today (Penguin Classics)
by Mark Twain, Charles Dudley Warner, Louis J. Budd
ISBN: 014043920X
Publisher: Penguin USA (Paper)
Pub. Date: 28 August, 2001
List Price(USD): $15.00

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