Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc

Mark TWAIN

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Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc

"ON THE WHOLE IT IS BETTER TO DESERVE HONORS AND NOT HAVE THEM…": WONDERFULLY INSCRIBED PRESENTATION COPY OF THE WORK MARK TWAIN CONSIDERED HIS BEST, PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF JOAN OF ARC

TWAIN, Mark. Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1906. Octavo, original gilt-stamped red cloth. Housed in custom half morocco clamshell box.

Later edition of the work Twain "personally considered his best," inscribed by Twain, "To Katy Murray from the eldest member of the household, The Author. On the whole it is better to deserve honors & not have them, than have them & not deserve them. Truly Yours, Mark Twain, April 6 / 07."

"The last novel that Mark Twain published in his lifetime, Joan of Arc occupies a unique place among his major works. Mark Twain regarded the book as his best and most important work" (Rasmussen, 255). "In Twain's only full-length work to focus on a female, Joan of Arc—modeled after his favorite daughter, Susy—is characterized as capable, defiant, independent, dynamic and courageous… Regarding this as a 'serious' work and not wanting to disappoint readers who expected humorous material, Twain insisted on anonymous publication" but later changed his mind (LeMaster & Wilson, 569-70). Twain has inscribed this presentation copy with one of his inimitable aphorisms, a saying he frequently used in correspondence and inscriptions. With photographic frontispiece, decorative table of contents and 34 photographic plates (all black-and-white). First published 1896. Later owner signatures. Recipient Katy Murray is likely the Twain family laundress, who left along with several other members of the staff during a dispute in 1908, but who later returned to working for Twain. "The servants who gave notice and left on 1 October [1908] were Claude Beuchotte, the butler; Mary Walsh, the cook; Katie Murray, the laundress (all of whom later returned)" (Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 3, 621).

A few minor abrasions to cloth. An about-fine and most desirable inscribed presentation copy.

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