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Following the Equator and anti-imperialist essays (1897)

por Mark Twain

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In 1895, bankrupted by his investments in the doomed Paige typesetter and by the collapse of his publishing house, sixty-year-old Mark Twain was forced to embark on a world lecture tour to raise money to pay his growing debts. Following the Equator, Twain's final travel book, was the result. His readers circumnavigate the globe with one of the world's most entertaining travel companions--to Honolulu and the Fiji Islands, Sydney and Melbourne, Tasmania, Ceylon, Bombay, Calcutta, Cape Town and Johannesburg. Twain blends whimsical anecdote, sharp-eyed commentary, and serious social critique, assailing the contempt of whites for native traditions, and noting the striking similarity between slavery and the colonial experience. In "To the Person Sitting in Darkness" and "King Leopold's Soliloquy," also included in this volume, Twain strips the imperialist powers naked and bears eloquent witness to the unspeakable crimes they perpetrate in the name of what he calls the "Blessings-of-Civilization Trust."… (más)
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This is a personal note about pagination; not to be confused with a review: This book is one of my more unique piece in that it's numbering system restarts itself a few different times within the book. Allow me to describe my volume and this will explain my pagination:

40 Front Matter (Roman numerals) pages
815 numbered pages
21 unpaged and plates combined
876 total pages

For those interested, breaking it down a bit more, as it appears:

xl......Front Matter (40 pages)
712...Following the Equator
2.......Unpaged
16.....To the Person Sitting in Darkness
6.......Unpaged
50.....King Leopold's Sililoquy
12.....6 unnumbered plates (photographs with blank backside 6x2=12)
37.....Afterword and remaining numbered pages.
1.......Unpaged
  ClearShax | Aug 26, 2018 |
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In 1895, bankrupted by his investments in the doomed Paige typesetter and by the collapse of his publishing house, sixty-year-old Mark Twain was forced to embark on a world lecture tour to raise money to pay his growing debts. Following the Equator, Twain's final travel book, was the result. His readers circumnavigate the globe with one of the world's most entertaining travel companions--to Honolulu and the Fiji Islands, Sydney and Melbourne, Tasmania, Ceylon, Bombay, Calcutta, Cape Town and Johannesburg. Twain blends whimsical anecdote, sharp-eyed commentary, and serious social critique, assailing the contempt of whites for native traditions, and noting the striking similarity between slavery and the colonial experience. In "To the Person Sitting in Darkness" and "King Leopold's Soliloquy," also included in this volume, Twain strips the imperialist powers naked and bears eloquent witness to the unspeakable crimes they perpetrate in the name of what he calls the "Blessings-of-Civilization Trust."

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