a critic before his time
Mark Twain is known all over the world as a down-to-earth humorist and teller of tales. His adventures have attracted readers ever since they were published. I certainly liked "Tom Sawyer", " "Huckleberry Finn", "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court", "Innocents Abroad", and "Roughing It". All these are classic American works which I could recommend to anyone. But many people, accustomed to his humor and down-home attitudes, may not realize that Samuel Clemens wrote a lot of bitter criticism of his own country and his own species. At a time when Europeans and Americans breathed religion (Christianity) and believed that the white man was destined to rule the world, thereby spawning ugly colonial/imperial wars, Mark Twain said 'no'. It took guts, and it took an independent mind. Today his writings on such subjects may seem merely politically correct. His critique of imperialism, wars, racism, corruption and organized religion has been duplicated so often that what was radical then may seem humdrum today. So much has the general attitude changed. But if you want to admire a man who dared to fly in the face of national, popular opinion when he could have basked in his deserved fame, you ought to read this book of excerpts from his many articles, letters, and books. Condemning the Tsarist rule in Russia, speaking out against the Belgian atrocities in the Congo, the American massacres in the Philippines, the Boer War, and Southern lynching are only a few of the topics you'll find here. I wonder if, even today, his writings are taught in high schools in America. They should be. Some of the excerpts here can be a bit preachy or long-winded, but in general Mark Twain hits the bullseye every time.