Mark Twain remains one of the most-quoted authors in
American history, the creator of masterpieces such as “Huckleberry Finn”
and “Life on the Mississippi.”
And much of what he wrote was dreck.
That last fact ought to be inspiring to all of us, notes author Megan McArdle in her clever, surprising fast-paced and enlightening book,
The Up Side of Down: Why Failing Well is the Key to Success.
McArdle explains that a college English course she took recast Twain as
a writer who failed like the rest of us: In the 1890s, Twain “churned
out lackluster prose on an almost industrial scale, just to get enough
money to maintain his household and pay his debts,” McArdle writes. “But
almost no English class reads the eminently forgettable stuff he
produced during this period.”
No comments:
Post a Comment