13 Fascinating Facts About Mark Twain From Ron Chernow’s New Biography

13 Fascinating Facts About Mark Twain From Ron Chernow’s New Biography


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Mark Twain was an enigmatic, complicated character, as detailed in Ron Chernow's new biography. Matt Chase Facebook Twitter LinkedIn


With his trademark white suits, droopy mustache and dandelion hair, the beloved humorist and author Mark Twain (1835–1910) is still an instantly recognizable figure more than a century after


his passing, at age 74. Today, he’s probably best known as the writer of two classic American novels, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the latter of


which Ernest Hemingway called the source of “all modern American literature.... There has been nothing as good since.”


But Twain was a more complex character than his image as a witty quipster and author of required reading for English classes might suggest, according to Ron Chernow’s voluminous new


biography, Mark Twain (out May 13).


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The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer (for Alexander Hamilton, which inspired the Broadway musical) offers a fascinating and, at more than 1,000 pages, hefty portrait of a volatile,


complicated, irreverent man who not only “dared to state things that others only thought” but also held a surprisingly dark view of society and human nature, with “some mysterious anger,


some pervasive melancholy” fueling his humor.


In short, Chernow writes, Twain “incarnated the best and sometimes the worst of America, all rolled into one.”


Here are 13 of the most intriguing things we learned about Twain’s life from the new book:

Twain at 15, holding printers' tools. He worked as a printer's apprentice, then as a newspaper


typesetter in his youth. VCG Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images 1. His relationship with his mother contributed to his esteem for women.


Born Samuel Langhorne Clemens in 1835, Twain, the sixth of seven children, was closer to his mother, Jane, than he was to his father. Their warm relationship would color his views of women


all his life. From Jane, Chernow writes, “Twain learned that he could trust women and express a richer spectrum of emotion than with men. With his father, Sam had to suppress his


personality; with his mother, he could flaunt it.” John Clemens, a judge who was cold and aloof to his son, died when the boy was 11, leaving the family in financial peril. Still, Twain was


often “shy and awkward” with women, according to Chernow.

The fence in front of Twain's childhood house in Hannibal, Missouri, was the likely inspiration for the famous fence-painting


scene in his novel "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," where Tom makes whitewashing the fence seem so fun, they ask if they can paint it themselves. George Pickow/Three Lions/Getty Images 2. 


Twain idealized youth.


Twain romanticized his hometown of Hannibal, Mo., in his fiction, evoking it as “the white town drowsing in the sunshine of a summer’s morning.” He saw it as a childhood paradise where


“youngsters went barefoot in summer and gorged on cornmeal cakes and catfish.” It left him with the sense, in Chernow’s assessment, that youth was “the only worthwhile period and that it was


all downhill after that.”

Twain was always drawn to the water. As a boy he dreamed of becoming a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images 3. The water


always beckoned him.


The Mississippi River (Hannibal is a port city) shaped not only Twain’s art, including his 1883 book Life on the Mississippi, but also his early ambitions: He dreamed of becoming a steamboat


pilot and worked on the river until the Civil War broke out. The water cast a dreamy spell on him and even inspired his pen name, Chernow writes: “On the Mississippi River, the leadsman


would sound the water’s depth by lowering a weighted rope, and if he cried ‘mark twain,’ it meant two fathoms or twelve feet, considered a safe depth.”