Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume I: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Clara Jean Livy and Susy 1880s - Mark Twain’s wife and daughters.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Clara Jean Livy and Susy 1880s - Mark Twain’s wife and daughters]]
[[Image:Clara Jean Livy and Susy 1880s - Mark Twain’s wife and daughters.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Clara, Jean, Livy and Susy, Mark Twain’s wife and daughters, 1880s]]
'''Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume I ''' is a book written by [[Mark Twain]] in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He dictated much of the book to his secretaries. The dictations are not in chronological order but rather in the order he found interesting while dictating.One of his daughters lived into the 1960s and left his Autobiography and his other personal papers to the University of California, Berkeley, near San Francisco. The Mark Twain Project  published the book about 100 years after Mark Twain died.
'''Autobiography of Mark Twain''' is the first complete and unrevised edition of the autobiography that [[Mark Twain]] had been dictating to his secretaries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The first of three projected volumes was published in 2010 by the Mark Twain Project, a hundred years after his death,. The text was among the personal papers that one of his daughters left to the University of California, Berkeley.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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Clara, Jean, Livy and Susy, Mark Twain’s wife and daughters, 1880s

Autobiography of Mark Twain is the first complete and unrevised edition of the autobiography that Mark Twain had been dictating to his secretaries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The first of three projected volumes was published in 2010 by the Mark Twain Project, a hundred years after his death,. The text was among the personal papers that one of his daughters left to the University of California, Berkeley.