<p>Threatened by a rival editor brandishing a double-barreled shotgun young Samuel Clemens had his first taste of literary criticism. Clemens began his long writing career penning satirical articles for his brother&#39;s newspaper in Hannibal Missouri. His humor delighted everyone except his targets and it would not be the last time his writing provoked threats of &quot;dissection tomahawking libel and getting his head shot off.&quot; Clemens adopted the name Mark Twain while living in the Nevada Territory where his caustic comedy led to angry confrontations a challenge to a duel and a subsequent flight. Nursing his wounded ego in California Twain vowed to develop a reputation that would &quot;stand fire&quot; and in the process became <em>the</em>&nbsp;classic American writer.<br /><em>Mark Twain under Fire</em>&nbsp;tracks the genesis and evolution of Twain&#39;s reputation as a writer: his reception as a humorist his &quot;return fire&quot; on genteel critics and the development of academic criticism. As a history of Twain criticism the book draws on English and foreign-language scholarship. Fulton discusses the forces and ideas that have influenced criticism revealing how and why Mark Twain has been &quot;under fire&quot; from the advent of his career to the present day when his masterpiece <em>Huckleberry Finn&nbsp;</em>remains one of America&#39;s most frequently banned books.</p><p>Joe B. Fulton is Professor of English at Baylor University in Waco Texas. He has published four previous books on Mark Twain.</p>
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