![]() ![]() ![]() The author of the introduction made it sound like Twain just filled out the second half of the book with a hodgepodge collection of other peoples’ articles and anecdotes. The story of Life on the Mississippi‘s creation is interesting, but finding out that fully half the book was considered ‘filler’ is not an auspicious start. The Introduction to my Folio edition doesn’t fill the reader with optimism. I grabbed it earlier this month, figuring that I could fulfil my yen for non-fiction and mark off a classic author at the same time. This it is why Life on the Mississippi has been sitting on my TBR shelf that, and the fact that I found a Folio Society copy for a bargain. Occasionally, the grown-up in me will rear her annoying head and insist that I at least try a classic or two – who knows? I might like it, and I don’t have to finish it if I don’t. I know it’s contrary and based on no rational I just don’t like being told what to do and what to like. The bias is this: It is my perverse nature to avoid books and authors considered to be classics. It’s a bias that I have fought against a spare few times in my life, but by and large, it has ruled my reading life. I have to admit, here, to a bias a prejudice. ![]()
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