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THE ADVENTURES OF TOM SAIOM MARK TOWIN / every life history/blogspot

 THE ADVENTURES OF TOM SAIOM MARK TOWIN


Mark Twain is not the real name of this author. Pseudonym. His real name is Samuel Langhorn Clemens. He spent his early childhood in Harriet, a small town in Missouri, USA.

Writing 'The Adventure of Tom Siam', he has smoothed those happy days. Mark Twain left school at the age of thirteen. An apprentice works as a coiner.

Later he worked as a printer in cities in the east and west of the United States. In 1858, Mark Twain visited downstream Mississippi and became a Kaguari on this huge river.

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Later he started writing humorous stories for newspapers. He became a popular writer in North America. The book The Innocent Abroad, a travelogue of 1859,

Is published. Encouraged by the success of the book, he decided to become a novelist. His wife is Olivia Langdon. Mark Twain moved to Harford, Connecticut, after his marriage. His family was formed there. Mark Twain wrote 'The Adventures of Tom Siam' from 1873 to 1875

In the middle of the year. His children liked this book. The story of the book becomes quite enjoyable as it is a realistic combination of humor and imagination in the course of events. As a result, the book became the messenger of countless readers all over the world. To many, the story of this book seems to be true. There are reasons. The story of the book is his last

Thriller events are highlighted and obscure ones are omitted. For example, the cave mentioned in the book Badurbhatri is actually a place three miles downstream of Hannibal. The cave was well known to teenager Samuel Clemens. The whole life of a boy

"It's not full of humor," said Twain, referring to his childhood. "There will be a lot of painful incidents. In this book, a boy from a backward society has captured some feelings of panic and fear. The relationship between Tom Sawyer and Polly Aunt and Huckleberry Finn is illustrated

Twain's extraordinary qualities are reflected in the descriptions of rural life in the area in the nineteenth-century Majamaji. (more)

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