This week in history, Samuel Clemens first used the pen name Mark Twain in a Virginia City newspaper, the “Territorial ...
American author Mark Twain's most notable claim to fame is penning ... The only thing that may have rivaled the prose he poured from his pen is his love for the alcohol he poured into his glass.
Twain discovered his pen name: it comes from "mark twain," the cry for a measured river depth of two fathoms. The Bell Jar came out in January 1963 and was published under the pen name Victoria Lucas.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Hartford-based Mark Twain House and Museum was recongnized in a list ...
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Mark Twain and Computing
The great American author Samuel Langhorne Clemens (1835–1910), better known by his pen name Mark Twain, wrote The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and its sequel, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ...
The riverboat captain is a storyteller. Captain Don Sanders shares the stories of his long association with the river — from ...
While there, Clemens began to write again -- and adopted the pen name "Mark Twain." A term used in river navigation, "mark twain" means water that is two fathoms (or about 12 feet) deep.
The prize's namesake, author Mark Twain, divined his pen name from a navigation term used by steamboat captains on a river. Many of his most famous works including the "Adventures of Huckleberry ...
While there, Clemens began to write again -- and adopted the pen name "Mark Twain." A term used in river navigation, "mark twain" means water that is two fathoms (or about 12 feet) deep.