The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg and Other Stories and Essays (Oxford Mark Twain)

by Mark Twain

Other authorsCynthia Ozick (Introduction)
Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

813.4

Collection

Publication

Oxford University Press Inc, USA (1996), Edition: New ed of 1900 ed, Hardcover, 528 pages

Description

Fiction. Literary Anthologies. Short Stories. Humor (Fiction.) HTML: Curl up with a collection of stories from the pen of one of the masters of American fiction and humor writing. This carefully curated volume of Twain's short stories represents a cross-section of some the author's finest work, including the title piece, which follows a stranger's plot to corrupt a purportedly honest community..

User reviews

LibraryThing member andyray
of the several stories, two bring a constant smile to my face: "travels with a reformer" and the Austrian legislature pieces (4 of them). Not his best, but certainly a needed asset to any library.
LibraryThing member yarb
A grab-bag of miscellaneous Twainings, not all of them "stories" as advertsied. There's a lot of filler here, like the unfunny essay on the pay of American diplomats, and the title story is a somewhat laboured morality tale that promises much but wears out its welcome. But there are also two
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absolute classics: My Debut as a Literary Person and A Double-Barrelled Detective Story. The first of these recounts Twain's writing of 43 Days in an Open Boat, his second-hand reporting of the incredible survival of 15 men from the Hornet following its burning in the Pacific. It's really just Twain's original newspaper story bolstered by excerpts from the logs of the captain and two passengers, but what a story! A Double-Barrelled Detective Story, meanwhile, is simply a side-splitting send-up of Sherlock Holmes (featuring the Great Detective himself, far from home in a tiny Montana mining town, and his nephew, Fetlock Jones), with a frame story about a boy with the nose of a bloodhound. Twain's parody of purple prose cracked me up when I read it while waiting for a bus:

It was a crisp and spicy morning in early October. The lilacs and laburnums, lit with the glory-fires of autumn, hung burning and flashing in the upper air, a fairy bridge provided by kind nature for the wingless wild things that have their home in the tree-tops and would visit together; the larch and the pomegranate flung their purple and yellow flames in brilliant broad splashes along the slanting sweep of woodland, the sensuous fragrance of innumerable deciduous flowers rose upon the swooning atmosphere, far in the empty sky a solitary oesophagus slept upon motionless wing; everywhere brooded stillness, serenity, and the peace of God.

It seems there are several different collections published under this title so your mileage may, as they say, vary.
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Language

Original publication date

1900 (collection)
1899 (Harper's Monthly)

Physical description

528 p.; 8.81 inches

ISBN

0195101502 / 9780195101508

Local notes

A collection of 15 short pieces that begins with a witty account of a fictional town called Hadleyburg, which prides itself on its long untarnished tradition of incorruptible citizens. One day someone in the town offends a stranger passing through and he vows to take revenge by plotting an elaborate scheme to show the whole nation just how corruptible this sanctimonious bastion of virtue really is.

Signed by Cynthia Ozick and Jeffrey Rubin-Dorsky.
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