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The Innocents Abroad (Dover Value Editions)

The Innocents Abroad (Dover Value Editions)
By Mark Twain

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Product Description

The Innocents Abroad sold over 70,000 copies in its first year and remained the best-selling of Twain's works throughout his lifetime. This classic records Twain's keen wit and amusing observations during his trip through Europe and the Holy Land in 1867. Edition also includes all of original work's charming illustrations. 234 black-and-white illustrations


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #318612 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-08-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 652 pages

Customer Reviews

What if Israel did not exist?5
I had heard that Mark Twain travelled around and wrote about the Middle east. Today some ask the question: "What if Israel did not exist?" The answer is right there by someone Americans can trust. Mark Twain says it all in the Innocents Abroad." That is what the whole Middle east would be if Israel did not exist.

A meandering tale of 19th-century travel3
This book is NOT an easy read, but it does have its rewards.

"The Innocents Abroad" is a long and meandering travelogue recounting Twain's 1867 trip to Europe and the Middle East aboard a chartered steamship of American tourists. Twain is observant, droll and amusing, but he also bogs the narrative down with numerous tedious tangents and obscure literary and bibilical references.

It is interesting to see the world of 1867 through Twain's eyes and to find that many of the annoyances of travel then are familiar today -- pushy vendors, long-winded guides, aggressive beggars. But it's also fascinating to see what's different -- the difficulty of finding soap in Europe, for example, or the need to travel partly by carriage, horse and donkey.

A couple of scenes were especially enjoyable. In Greece, the Americans were forbidden to land. Desperate to see the Parthenon and the Acropolis, Twain and others snuck off the ship in the middle of night, crept through city streets and then bribed guards to see the landmarks. Later, at Yalta on the Black Sea, the travelers remarkably got to meet the emperor of Russia simply because they were Americans, and were treated as grand representatives of their country.

While Twain makes it clear that he is a Bible-reading man, he despises those who are excessively pious or who use religion arrogantly. Italy, he says, has built magnificent churches while "starving half her citizens to accomplish it. She is today one vast museum of magnificance and misery." In the Middle East, he mocks those who operate questionably "holy" sites to lure in tourists.

It is hard to imagine any travel writer as blunt as Twain. He describes the Azores as "eminently Portuguese -- that is to say, it is slow, poor, shiftless, sleepy, and lazy." He says Moorish women have "atrocious ugliness."

The most disturbing element of the book is Twain's bigotry toward Muslims. He calls the Muslim turks "by nature and training filthy, brutish, ignorant, unprogressive, superstitious." He calls the residents of Damascus the "ugliest, wickedest-looking villains we have seen." He unapologetically says Muslims will never be the equal of Christians until they learn to repent.

This is a long book (my edition was 495 pages of rather dense type), but I found you don't have to read it straight through. Since there are few continuing characters, you can put it down and pick up later with little loss. To avoid getting bogged down, I suggest you skip over Twain's numerous digressions and instead skip ahead to the parts where he is actually traveling or personally engaged in an activitiy.

Arrogance Revisited1
The book is nothing more than the arrogance of American pilgrims or travelers looking and sounding superior to "foreigners." I could not get through it and I don't regret it.