Extract from Captain Stormfield Visit to Heaven

Extract from Captain Stormfield Visit to Heaven

by Mark Twain
Publisher: Harper & Brothers
©1909, Item: 61960
Hardcover, 122 pages
Not in stock

; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);">Twain's witty vision of what heaven "is really like" is told from the point of view of the recently deceased Captain Stormfield. In a folksy narration peppered with sailor's jargon, the amiable, altogether down-to-earth merchant marine describes a series of amusingly disconcerting revelations about the next world.

; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);">Sitting on a cloud strumming a harp all day turns out to be insufferably boring; being eternally youthful also has its drawbacks when the captain finds himself not mixing well with a crowd of insipid teenagers; and Native Americans so outnumber whites in the North American district of Paradise that the average white Anglo-Saxon male has trouble finding someone to talk to. In fact the outlandish dimensions and characteristics of heaven utterly explode every human conception.

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