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Rating:  Summary: Short, Funny and Original Review: Apparently this version of the text is not the expanded version. I recommend getting the expanded edition ('translated' by Mark Twain). But if you get this one, here's what I think:Retelling the famous story of Adam and Eve is always an exciting venture. There are so many cultural, religious and political overtones to the original story (or stories?) in the Bible that any retelling is bound to spark contention. Milton's Paradise Lost is a great example of this. Even better are the stories by the long forgotten Gnostic Christians (See Elaine Pagels) who thought that the serpent was the hero of the story. Twain has his own take on the matter. Adam is a boring, conceited man (at first) who is annoyed by Eve and her curiosity about everything. Eve is wonderful; she names everything (like Adam in the original story) and has an abundance of scientific wonder of the world. The only thing odd in this story was its avoidance of the temptation of Eve by the serpent--it was only mentioned in passing. Personally, I find that the most interesting part (see Milton) and i would haved loved to see Twain's thoughts on it. Nevertheless, this is a short, funny (isn't Twain always?) and lively book that you can get through in an hour. If for no other reason, read it for its redemption of Eve from the sexist (and confusing) story of the OT.
Rating:  Summary: Great for the married couple Review: I really didn't know what sort of theme this book would have. Turns out it was pretty much a diary of the "first married couple" It would be a good book for a first anniversary gift. It's not bad, definitely well written. It wouldn't be offensive to anyone who actually read it.
Rating:  Summary: Great for the married couple Review: I really didn't know what sort of theme this book would have. Turns out it was pretty much a diary of the "first married couple" It would be a good book for a first anniversary gift. It's not bad, definitely well written. It wouldn't be offensive to anyone who actually read it.
Rating:  Summary: Twain's Adam & Eve, but not the whole story... Review: I was forced to read passages from this book in High School. When it comes down to it, it really isn't a realistic book. How could there possible have been a diary kept by Adam and Eve? Of course there wasn't. But through my college years, some of the parts I had read stuck with me. " Wheresoever she was THERE was Eden" Better to live outside the garden with her than in the garden with out her. Simple guides to love I thought. I drove to a library 45 minutes from where I live to read a shabby old copy of this book and couldn't put it down. The book is great for couples and great for the pure of heart!
Rating:  Summary: WONDERFUL!!! Review: If there is a shorter, funnier, more delightful book on the planet, I have yet to find it. The genius that was Twain's is in abundant evidence here. And there is no longer version, this is it. Twain only wrote "extracts from" to make it seem more believable. Notice the "translated" also? I own the PBS version with David and Meredith Baxter Birney and have watched it many times, but I still laughed out loud when I finally got around to reading this short little gem. And the illustrations are at least half of the fun. I suspect this can re-read many times, especially when one is in need of a pick-me-up. Because, as always with Twain, much wisdom is interspersed with the humor. And beautifully written passages as well. DON'T MISS THIS ONE!!!
Rating:  Summary: difference between a man and woman Review: It's impressive how well Mark Twain describes difference between a man and woman. It's sometimes funny and often sentimental to love....
Rating:  Summary: difference between a man and woman Review: It's impressive how well Mark Twain describes difference between a man and woman. It's sometimes funny and often sentimental to love....
Rating:  Summary: a gift for honeymooners Review: This abridged version has been a very good gift for newly married couples who would like something short and sentimental and a little thought-provoking to read while honeymooning. It provides the literary and emotional essentials of the longer edition. The editing, while at times abrupt, is smooth enough to make the story easy to follow. This little book manages to evoke more passionate emotions, word for word, than anything else you'll find. You'll be confused, frustrated, awed, elated, broken, and hopeful as Adam and Eve (and Twain) pull you into their thoughts and interpretations of life. This is a great little valentine for your sweetheart or yourself, and has been appreciated by each of the several couples to whom I've given it, and treasured by some. One couple read it to one another as they drove across the country on their honeymoon. Another read it on a sunny tropical beach. I recommend this version over the unabridged version for most gift recipients, as it's more likely to be read completely. ...And if you buy this wonderful book for wonderful friends, you don't want them to miss the end!
Rating:  Summary: a gift for honeymooners Review: This abridged version has been a very good gift for newly married couples who would like something short and sentimental and a little thought-provoking to read while honeymooning. It provides the literary and emotional essentials of the longer edition. The editing, while at times abrupt, is smooth enough to make the story easy to follow. This little book manages to evoke more passionate emotions, word for word, than anything else you'll find. You'll be confused, frustrated, awed, elated, broken, and hopeful as Adam and Eve (and Twain) pull you into their thoughts and interpretations of life. This is a great little valentine for your sweetheart or yourself, and has been appreciated by each of the several couples to whom I've given it, and treasured by some. One couple read it to one another as they drove across the country on their honeymoon. Another read it on a sunny tropical beach. I recommend this version over the unabridged version for most gift recipients, as it's more likely to be read completely. ...And if you buy this wonderful book for wonderful friends, you don't want them to miss the end!
Rating:  Summary: Ridiculously Funny and Poignantly Beautiful Review: What if Adam and Eve had kept diaries? What would this have told us of their characters? Mark Twain, in his brilliance, shows what the possible result may have been in these two diaries. Adam is a clumsy oaf, and rather stupid and economical with his words. He thinks that Eve is a pain in the neck, always naming things, always in his way. When Cain makes his appearance, at first Adam thinks that Cain is a fish out of water, then perhaps a monkey, maybe a bear, and so forth. Sundays are a torture to be endured and survived. Eve is poetic, a dreamer. She cries when she sees her first dawn, thinking that the stars have gone away forever. She befriends the animals, naming them. She grieves over Adam's stupidity and tries to 'help' him through it. Somehow, the two become reconciled to each other and build a life of love and experience. It is a wonderful tale, at once funny and sad, blunt and poetic, practical and dreamy. Perhaps the best way to describe this book is with a couple of quotes from it, the final quotes from each of the major characters: Eve: It is my prayer, it is my longing, that we may pass from this life together--a longing which shall never perish from the earth, but shall have a place in the heart of every wife that loves, until the end of time; and it shall be called by my name. But if one of us must go first, it is my prayer that it shall be I; for he is strong, I am weak, I am not so necessary to him as he is to me--life without him would not be life; how could I endure it? This prayer is also immortal, and will not cease from being offered up while my race continues. I am the first wife, and in the last wife I shall be repeated. Adam (at Eve's graveside): Wheresoever she was, THERE was Eden.
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