logo
Book excerpt: "Mark Twain" by Ron Chernow

Book excerpt: "Mark Twain" by Ron Chernow

Yahoo16 hours ago
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
"Mark Twain" (Penguin Press), the latest book from Ron Chernow, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of George Washington, Alexander Hamilton and Ulysses S. Grant, examines the life of one of America's greatest and most beloved writers.
Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Robert Costa's interview with Ron Chernow on "CBS Sunday Morning" July 6!
"Mark Twain" by Ron Chernow
Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Prelude
The Pilot House
From the time he was a small boy in Hannibal, Missouri, the Mississippi River had signified freedom for Samuel Langhorne Clemens (later known as Mark Twain), a place where he could toss aside worldly cares, indulge in high spirits, and find sanctuary from society's restraints. For a sheltered, small‑town youth, the boisterous life aboard the steamboats plying the river, swarming with raffish characters, offered a gateway to a wider world. Pilots stood forth as undisputed royalty of this floating kingdom, and it was the pride of Twain's early years that, right before the Civil War, he had secured a license in just two years. However painstaking it was for a cub navigator to memorize the infinite details of a mutable river with its shifting snags, shoals, and banks, Twain had prized this demanding period of his life. Later he admitted that "I loved the profession far better than any I have followed since," the reason being quite simple: "a pilot, in those days, was the only unfettered and entirely independent human being that lived in the earth." In contrast, even kings and diplomats, editors and clergymen, felt muzzled by public opinion. "In truth, every man and woman and child has a master, and worries and frets in servitude; but in the day I write of, the Mississippi pilot had none." That search for untrammeled truth and freedom would form a defining quest of Mark Twain's life.
For a man who immortalized Hannibal and the majestic river flowing past it, Twain had returned surprisingly few times to these youthful scenes, as if fearful that new impressions might intrude on cherished memories. In 1875, as he was about to turn forty, he had published in the Atlantic Monthly a seven‑part series titled "Old Times on the Mississippi," which chronicled his days as an eager young pilot. Now, in April 1882, he rounded up his publisher, James R. Osgood, and a young Hartford stenographer, Roswell H. Phelps, and set out for a tour of the Mississippi that would allow him to elaborate those earlier articles into a full‑length volume, Life on the Mississippi, that would fuse travel reportage with the earlier memoir. He had long fantasized about, but also long postponed, this momentous return to the river. "But when I come to write the Mississippi book," he promised his wife, Livy, "then look out! I will spend 2 months on the river & take notes, & I bet you I will make a standard work."
Twain mapped out an ambitious six‑week odyssey, heading first down the river from St. Louis to New Orleans, then retracing his steps as far north as St. Paul, Minnesota, stopping en route at Hannibal. The three men sped west by the Pennsylvania Railroad in a "joggling train," the very mode of transportation that already threatened the demise of the freewheeling steamboat culture Twain had treasured. By journeying from east to west, he reversed the dominant trajectory of his life, enabling him to appraise his midwestern roots with fresh eyes. "All the R.R. station loafers west of Pittsburgh carry both hands in their pockets," he observed. "Further east one hand is sometimes out of doors." Now accustomed to the genteel affluence of Hartford, Connecticut, where he had resided for a decade, he had grown painfully aware of the provinciality of his boyhood haunts. "The grace and picturesqueness of female dress seem to disappear as one travels west away from N. York."
To secure candid glimpses of his old Mississippi world, Twain traveled under the incognito of "Mr. Samuel," but he underestimated his own renown. From St. Louis he informed Livy that he "got to meeting too many people who knew me. We swore them to secrecy, & left by the first boat." After the three travelers boarded the steamer Gold Dust—"a vile, rusty old steamboat"—Twain was spotted by an old shipmate, his alias blown again. Henceforth his celebrity, which clung to him everywhere, would transform the atmosphere he sought to recapture. For all his joy at being afloat, he carped at the ship's squalor, noting passageways "less than 2 inches deep in dirt" and spittoons "not particularly clean." He dispatched the vessel with a sarcasm: "This boat built by [Robert] Fulton; has not been repaired since." At many piers he noted that whereas steamers in his booming days had been wedged together "like sardines in a box," a paucity of boats now sat loosely strung along empty docks.
Twain was saddened by the backward towns they passed, often mere collections of "tumble‑down frame houses unpainted, looking dilapidated" or "a miserable cabin or two standing in [a] small opening on the gray and grassless banks of the river." No less noticeable was how the river had reshaped a landscape he had once strenuously committed to memory. Hamlets that had fronted the river now stood landlocked, and when the boat stopped at a "God forsaken rocky point," disgorging passengers for an inland town, Twain stared mystified. "I couldn't remember that town; couldn't place it; couldn't call its name . . . couldn't imagine what the damned place might be." He guessed, correctly, that it was Ste. Genevieve, a onetime Missouri river town that in bygone days had stood "on high ground, handsomely situated," but had now been relocated by the river to a "town out in the country."
Once Twain's identity was known—his voice and face, his nervous habit of running his hand through his hair, gave the game away—the pilots embraced this prodigal son as an honored member of their guild. In the ultimate compliment, they gave him the freedom to guide the ship alone—a dreamlike consummation. "Livy darling, I am in solitary possession of the pilot house of the steamer Gold Dust, with the familiar wheel & compass & bell ropes around me . . . I'm all alone, now (the pilot whose watch it is, told me to make myself entirely at home, & I'm doing it)." He seemed to expand in the solitary splendor of the wheelhouse and drank in the river's beauty. "It is a magnificent day, & the hills & levels are masses of shining green, with here & there a white‑blossoming tree. I love you, sweetheart."
Always a hypercritical personality, prone to disappointment, Mark Twain often felt exasperated in everyday life. By contrast, the return to the pilot house cast a wondrous spell on him, retrieving precious moments of his past when he was still young and unencumbered by troubles. The river had altered many things beyond recognition. "Yet as unfamiliar as all the aspects have been to‑day," he recorded in his copious notes, "I have felt as much at home and as much in my proper place in the pilot house as if I had never been out of the pilot house." It was a pilot named Lem Gray who had allowed Twain to steer the ship himself. Lem "would lie down and sleep, and leave me there to dream that the years had not slipped away; that there had been no war, no mining days, no literary adventures; that I was still a pilot, happy and care‑free as I had been twenty years before." One morning he arose at 4 a.m. to watch "the day steal gradually upon this vast silent world . . . the marvels of shifting light & shade & color & dappled reflections that followed, were bewitching to see." The paradox of Twain's life was that the older and more famous he became and the grander his horizons, the more he pined for the vanished paradise of his early years. His youth would remain the magical touchstone of his life, his memories preserved in amber.
An excerpt from "Mark Twain," published by Penguin Press, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © 2025 by Ron Chernow. Reproduced with permission.
Get the book here:
"Mark Twain" by Ron Chernow
Buy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
"Mark Twain" by Ron Chernow (Penguin Press), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats
Several people missing from Texas summer camp amid deadly flooding, officials say
What a new DOJ memo could mean for naturalized U.S. citizens
Emulsifying the truth behind mayonnaise
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fans Still Believe in LeBron James, 40, After Seeing Latest Photo
Fans Still Believe in LeBron James, 40, After Seeing Latest Photo

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Fans Still Believe in LeBron James, 40, After Seeing Latest Photo

Fans Still Believe in LeBron James, 40, After Seeing Latest Photo originally appeared on Athlon Sports. LeBron James is set to return for his 23rd season in the NBA. What's not clear, however, is if he will be with the Los Angeles Lakers when the 2025-26 season starts. Advertisement After James picked up his $52.6 million player option with the Lakers, his agent and good friend Rich Paul made it clear that the 40-year-old star "wants to compete for a championship" and "values a realistic chance of winning it all." The statement fueled speculation that James would ask for a trade if the Lakers fail to build a legitimate title contender around him and Luka Doncic. Since then, the Cleveland Cavaliers, Dallas Mavericks and Golden State Warriors have been linked with James in a possible trade or buyout. Amid the rumors, however, the four-time NBA MVP is keeping his focus on preparing his body for the rigors of another grueling campaign. On Sunday, James posted a mirror photo of himself showing off his ripped physique. Advertisement Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) is keeping himself in top condition ahead of the 2025-26 NBA Lee-Imagn Images Several fans couldn't help but be in awe of how well LeBron James has taken care of his body, even at this point in his life and career. "LeBron James is in ridiculous shape," a fan account posted. Another one shared, "When is he never in great shape?" "Dude built like a Greece God , pause lol," a third follower shared. Several other fans expressed their belief that James still has what it takes to dominate in the NBA. "League is shaking," a fan remarked. Another supporter added, "Bron still being in better shape than 98% of the league isn't only embarrassing for the young boys but for Adam Silver. You keep trying to push big dawg out the way when he really the blueprint to get [expletive] done." Advertisement "Year 23 loading.." a poster further stated. Related: LeBron James' Damian Lillard Comment Resurfaces After Lakers Report This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 7, 2025, where it first appeared.

Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for July 7 #287
Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for July 7 #287

CNET

time34 minutes ago

  • CNET

Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for July 7 #287

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today's Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles. I saw the Brad Pitt movie F1 last week, and it was excellent. Thrilled to see it turn up in today's Connections: Sports Edition. That green category is pretty simple, but if you need help with the puzzle, read on for hints and the answers. Connections: Sports Edition is out of beta now, making its debut on Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 9. That's a sign that the game has earned enough loyal players that The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by the Times, will continue to publish it. It doesn't show up in the NYT Games app but now appears in The Athletic's own app. Or you can continue to play it free online. Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta Hints for today's Connections: Sports Edition groups Here are four hints for the groupings in today's Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group. Yellow group hint: Gridiron numbers. Green group hint: Car cinema. Blue group hint: Touch 'em all. Purple group hint: Color inside these. Answers for today's Connections: Sports Edition groups Yellow group: Stats for a football defensive player, in singular form. Green group: Racing movies. Blue group: Last four HR Derby winners. Purple group: Line ____. Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words What are today's Connections: Sports Edition answers? The completed NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for July 7, 2025. NYT/Screenshot by CNET The yellow words in today's Connections The theme is stats for a football defensive player, in singular form. The four answers are forced fumble, interception, sack and tackle. The green words in today's Connections The theme is racing movies. The four answers are Days of Thunder, F1, Ford v Ferrari and Talladega Nights. The blue words in today's Connections The theme is last four HR Derby winners. The four answers are Alonso, Guerrero, Hernández and Soto. The purple words in today's Connections The theme is line ____. The four answers are change, drive, judge and of scrimmage.

Iconic '80s Actress, 70, Stuns in Rare Los Angeles Sighting
Iconic '80s Actress, 70, Stuns in Rare Los Angeles Sighting

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Iconic '80s Actress, 70, Stuns in Rare Los Angeles Sighting

Iconic '80s Actress, 70, Stuns in Rare Los Angeles Sighting originally appeared on Parade. Actress Priscilla Barnes, 70, made a rare appearance out and about in Los Angeles. The Daily Mail reported that Barnes, known for her roles in the sitcom Three's Company and the 1989 James Bond film Licence to Kill, was all smiles while walking in a residential area in L.A. The actress opted to wear a pink T-shirt, a pair of blue jeans, and black tennis shoes. While she was photographed, Barnes held onto a glass containing a beverage and a tote bag. Barnes started playing her Three's Company character, nurse Terri Alden, during the show's sixth season. While speaking to Antenna TV in 2017, alongside her Three's Company castmates Richard Kline, Joyce DeWitt, and Jenilee Harrison, Barnes said she did not think she deserved the fame of being on Three's Company. She explained that she immediately felt eyes on her because Terri was Jack Tripper and Janet Wood's new roommate after Christmas "Chrissy" Snow (Suzanne Somers) and Cindy Snow (Harrison) left the apartment. "I felt like an imposter the first table read because [the other actors] had earned being there. I had not earned being there. I had just came in for a part where the person who exited was high profile," said Barnes during the interview. She also said "it was hard coming in" to an established series, especially one in front of a live studio audience. "It feels like you didn't earn it and it was really fast. You have to hit the ground running," said the Jane the Virgin actress. She also said she nearly wasn't hired because she "hadn't done comedy" before the sitcom. "I'd only done drama," said Barnes. In addition, the actress said she was typecast as a nurse after the series ended following its 8th season in 1984. "Then after the show ended, I was only hired to play nurses," said Barnes in the 2017 interview. Iconic '80s Actress, 70, Stuns in Rare Los Angeles Sighting first appeared on Parade on Jul 6, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 6, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store