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Mark Twain and the Colonel: Samuel Clemens, Theodore Roosevelt

July 29, 2012 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

Mark Twain Theordore RooseveltBook purchases made through this link support New York Almanack’s mission to report new publications relevant to New York State.

Around 1900 two celebrated figures with close ties to New York rivaled each other in the love of their countrymen: Mark Twain and Theodore Roosevelt. Theodore Roosevelt dominated the politics of the era the way the author of Huckleberry Finn dominated its culture.

As national celebrities, Roosevelt and Mark Twain were well acquainted, and neither spoke ill of the other in public. Yet Philip McFarland, author of five works of non-fiction, reveals a behind-closed-doors rivalry in his book, Mark Twain and the Colonel: Samuel L. Clemens, Theodore Roosevelt, and the Arrival of a New Century (2012, Rowman & Littlefield).

The book chronicles in-depth a relationship so prickly that it led Roosevelt privately to comment that he “would like to skin Mark Twain alive” and the humorist to assert that Roosevelt was “far and away the worst President we have ever had.”

Focusing on the issues from which modern society has emerged and framed within those clamorous and influential decades in American history, McFarland tells a remarkable story of popular culture and personal biography in Mark Twain and The Colonel.

Book purchases made through this Amazon link help support this site. Books noticed on this site have been provided by the publishers.

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Filed Under: Books, Arts, History Tagged With: Cultural History, Literature, Mark Twain, Political History, Pop Culture History, Theodore Roosevelt

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