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Classic Audiobook Collection - A Double Barrelled Detetive Story by Mark Twain ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
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A Double Barrelled Detetive Story by Mark Twain ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]

Classic Audiobook Collection

09/16/22

125m

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A Double Barrelled Detetive Story by Mark Twain audiobook.

Genre: comedy

In A Double Barrelled Detective Story, Mark Twain loads his satire with two interlocking barrels: one aimed at revenge, the other at the smug certainties of detective fiction. The tale begins with a wealthy young woman whose marriage to the resentful Jacob Fuller turns vicious, leaving her humiliated, abandoned, and determined to reclaim her dignity. Years later, she places her hopes in her son, Archy Stillman, a quiet, driven young man gifted with an uncanny sense of smell - so keen it rivals a bloodhound's. Trained to track down the man who shattered their lives, Archy heads west with purpose burning hotter than any frontier sun.Just as his pursuit gathers force, Twain swings the story into a rough California mining camp where a shocking crime erupts, and the celebrated Sherlock Holmes arrives to demonstrate his famous logic on American soil. Holmes' confident deductions collide with local chaos, colorful witnesses, and Archy's almost supernatural instincts, turning the investigation into a sharp comedy of methods, pride, and misdirection. By blending melodrama, courtroom spectacle, and parody, Twain invites you to ask whether truth is found by reasoning, instinct, or sheer human messiness - and he has plenty of fun keeping you guessing.

Chapters (Approximate)

(00:00:00) Chapter 01

(00:05:14) Chapter 02

(00:16:58) Chapter 03

(00:36:02) Chapter 04

(00:48:51) Chapter 05

(01:01:34) Chapter 06

(01:11:53) Chapter 07

(01:21:03) Chapter 08

(01:43:50) Chapter 09

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Previous Episode

The Death Disk by Mark Twain audiobook.

Genre: drama

Mark Twain's 'Death Disk' was inspired by the historical account of the execution of Colonel John Poyer of Pembroke, Wales on April 21, 1649. A small child was given the responsibility of selecting which of three rebel leaders of a civil uprising would receive a death penalty. The unfortunate fate was given to Poyer who was shot in front of a large crowd at Covent Garden. In 1883 Twain read about the child's role in the execution in a copy of Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, (Wiley & Putnam, 1845, pp. 344-345). In his personal notebook, Twain's imagination led him to remark, 'By dramatic accident, it could have been his own child' (Notebook #22, reprinted in Mark Twain's Notebooks & Journals, Volume III, 1883-1891, p. 14). In December 1883, Twain wrote his friend William Dean Howells, 'Now let's write a tragedy' (Mark Twain-Howells Letters, Volume II, p. 455). In his letter to Howells, he included the manuscript of the closing scene where a young girl unknowingly gives her own father a death sentence. Twain's original version ended in the father's execution.

Twain's plan to complete the tragedy went nowhere for over a decade. In December 1899 he wrote from London to Katharine Harrison that he had recently completed 'The Death Disk.' Twain had revised the story and it now included a miraculous ending well-suited for the Christmas season. It was published in the 1901 Christmas issue of Harper's Magazine. On February 8, 1902, the story was staged as a one-act play at the Children's Theatre at Carnegie Hall. According to an announcement in The New York Times, February 7, 1902, child actress Beatrice Abbey (stage name of Mrs. Ethel Foster Hollearn) would star in the lead role in the play titled 'Little Lady and Lord Cromwell.'

In Twain's autobiographical dictation on August 30, 1906, he recalled the struggles he had with the story. By that time he also recalled the title incorrectly: 'In the course of twelve years, I made six attempts to tell a simple little story which I knew would tell itself in four hours if I could ever find the right starting point. I scored six failures; then one day in London I offered the text of the story to Robert McClure and proposed that he publish that text in the magazine and offer a prize to the person who should tell it best. I became greatly interested and went on talking upon the text for half an hour; then he said, 'You have told the story yourself. You have nothing to do but put it on paper just as you have told it.' I recognized that this was true. At the end of four hours, it was finished, and quite to my satisfaction. So it took twelve years and four hours to produce that little bit of a story, which I have called 'The Death Wafer'' (Mark Twain in Eruption, pp. 199-200).

Chapters (Approximate)

(00:00:00) Chapter 01

(00:13:35) Chapter 02

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Next Episode

Europe and Elsewhere by Mark Twain audiobook.

Genre: comedy

In Europe and Elsewhere, Mark Twain turns his sharp eye and sharper wit on the rituals, pretensions, and everyday oddities he encounters abroad and at home. Drawn from his travel pieces and occasional writings, this collection follows Twain as he sizes up grand monuments and small inconveniences alike, comparing Old World traditions to American habits with a comic sense of proportion that never lets pomposity go unpunished. Whether he is describing the theater of polite society, the chaos of tourism, or the strange logic of official rules, Twain writes as a companionable guide who is always ready to puncture a solemn mood with a perfectly timed aside. The 'elsewhere' expands beyond geography into reflections on politics, culture, and human nature, revealing how quickly people invent stories to defend their customs and how stubbornly they cling to them. Beneath the laughter runs a consistent tension: the narrator wants to admire what is noble and beautiful, but cannot ignore the absurdity that tags along. The result is a spirited, bite-sized tour through Twain's classic voice - skeptical, observant, and irresistibly funny.

Chapters (Approximate)

(00:00:00) Chapter 00

(00:52:15) Chapter 01

(01:21:13) Chapter 02

(01:44:50) Chapter 03

(02:02:44) Chapter 04

(03:04:45) Chapter 05

(04:09:53) Chapter 06

(04:24:14) Chapter 07

(05:09:45) Chapter 08

(05:47:23) Chapter 09

(06:35:39) Chapter 10

(07:20:11) Chapter 11

(07:33:45) Chapter 12

(08:00:50) Chapter 13

(08:17:53) Chapter 14

(09:00:47) Chapter 15

(09:25:07) Chapter 16

(09:34:30) Chapter 17

(09:53:56) Chapter 18

(10:06:31) Chapter 19

(10:35:35) Chapter 20

(11:23:55) Chapter 21

(12:10:48) Chapter 22

(12:15:29) Chapter 23

(12:18:19) Chapter 24

(12:25:03) Chapter 25

(12:38:40) Chapter 26

(12:46:47) Chapter 27

(13:02:26) Chapter 28

(13:31:22) Chapter 29

(13:44:54) Chapter 30

(13:52:20) Chapter 31

(14:01:25) Chapter 32

(14:06:41) Chapter 33

(14:52:04) Chapter 34

(15:08:41) Chapter 35

(15:24:33) Chapter 36

(15:34:00) Chapter 37

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