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There are 4 critical essays on Mark Twain.
Critical Essays on Mark Twain
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Louis A. Renza
10,710 words, approx. 36 pages
 In the following essay, Renza discusses various critical responses to the random and repetitious presentation of events in Mark Twain's Autobiography and Life on the Mississippi.
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Critical Essay by Andrew Hook
6,040 words, approx. 20 pages
 In the following essay, Hook contends that Mark Twain's greatest contribution to realism in his short fiction was primarily through his use of American vernacular speech.
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Larry R. Dennis
5,391 words, approx. 18 pages
 In the following essay, Dennis discusses Mark Twain's handling of death in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and in his unfinished "The Great Dark. "
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Critical Essay by John Ferguson
1,319 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following essay, Ferguson critiques Mark Twain's utopian story “The Curious Republic of Gondour.”



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