Mark Twain's Other Woman
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Laura Skandera Trombley, the preeminent Twain scholar at work today, reveals the never-before-read letters and daily journals of Isabel Lyon, Mark Twain’s last personal secretary.
For six years, Isabel Lyon was responsible for running the aging Man in White’s chaotic household, nursing him through several illnesses and serving as his adoring audience. But after a dramatic breakup of their relationship, Twain ranted in personal letters that she was “a liar, a forger, a thief, a hypocrite, a drunkard, a sneak, a humbug, a traitor, a conspirator, a filthy-minded and salacious slut pining for seduction.” For decades, biographers omitted Isabel from the official Twain history at his decree. But now, the truth of the split is exposed at last in a story that sheds light on a lionized author’s final decade.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this book on Twain's last decade and his complicated relationship with his secretary, Isabel Lyon, Trombley is often too much the professor quoting overlong passages when summary and interpretation would be better. An otherwise informative epilogue rambles. But when Trombley hits her stride, we learn quite a lot of the Twain household's secrets. Lyon wormed her way into Twain's life in the late 1880s as his favorite whist partner. Upon realizing the worth of Twain's letters, she obtained full power of attorney. She feuded with his hot-tempered daughter Clara over who would be "in charge" of his affairs. But the manipulative Lyon also truly loved "the King," and in his loneliness after his wife's death, he was responsive. Twain's ultimate falling out with Lyon, including Twain's charges that she made unwanted sexual advances to him, make for painful reading and will be controversial. 43 photos.