A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's court / Mark Twain.
By: Twain, Mark.
Publisher: New York : Bantam Books, c1981Description: 274 p.ISBN: 0553211439.Subject(s): Americans--Great Britain--Fiction | Arthurian romances--Adaptations | Knights and knighthood--Fiction | Time travel--Fiction | Great Britain--Fiction | Fantasy fictionDDC classification: D T192c 1981 Summary: "This novel tells the story of Hank Morgan, the quintessential self-reliant New Englander who brings to King Arthur's Age of Chivalry the "great and beneficent" miracles of nineteenth-century engineering and American ingenuity. Through the collision of past and present, Twain exposes the insubstantiality of both utopias, destroying the myth of the romantic ideal as well as his own era's faith in scientific and social progress. A central document in American intellectual history, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court is at once a hilarious comedy of anachronisms and incongruities, a romantic fantasy, a utopian vision, and a savage, anarchic social satire that only one of America's greatest writers could pen."Item type | Current location | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Book | High School Library | High School Library | Fiction | D T192c 1981 (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | HS3493 |
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"This novel tells the story of Hank Morgan, the quintessential self-reliant New Englander who brings to King Arthur's Age of Chivalry the "great and beneficent" miracles of nineteenth-century engineering and American ingenuity. Through the collision of past and present, Twain exposes the insubstantiality of both utopias, destroying the myth of the romantic ideal as well as his own era's faith in scientific and social progress. A central document in American intellectual history, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court is at once a hilarious comedy of anachronisms and incongruities, a romantic fantasy, a utopian vision, and a savage, anarchic social satire that only one of America's greatest writers could pen."
FICTION