Mark Twain Mark Twain

Innocents Abroad (1869)

Mark Twain

    The second book by Mark Twain, this was a great popular success. Within its first year it sold over 70,000 copies, and it remained the best-selling of his books throughout his lifetime. The book began as a series of travel letters written mainly for the Alta California, a San Francisco paper that sponsored MT's participation in the Quaker City trip to Europe and the Holy Land in 1867. Revising the letters into a book was suggested by Elisha Bliss, who published Innocents as a subscription book on July 20th, 1869.

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