Mark Twain's Works
While providing a comprehensive detailing of each of Twain's published works is beyond the scope of this reference, the following chronology lists Twain's most recognizable novels and short stories published during his lifetime and posthumously.
1862-1864 | Mark Twain works as a journalist and writes stories, primarily for the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise, Virginia City, Nevada. Stories include: Curing A Cold, The Killing of Julius Caesar 'Localized,' and Lucretia Smith's Soldier. |
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1865 | Jim Smiley and His Jumping Frog in New York's Saturday Press. |
1867 | The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, and Other Sketches; Twain's first book. |
1869 | Innocents Abroad. Stories: Journalism in Tennessee, A Day at Niagara. |
1870 | Stories for the New York monthly Galaxy and Buffalo Express include: A Medieval Romance, Political Economy, and How I Edited An Agricultural Paper Once. |
1872 | Roughing It. |
1873 | The Gilded Age; with Charles Dudley Warner. |
1875 | Sketches, New and Old; Old Times on the Mississippi presented in installments in the Atlantic Monthly. |
1876 | Tom Sawyer. |
1877 | A True Story and the Recent Carnival of Crime. |
1880 | A Tramp Abroad; 1601. |
1881 | The Prince and the Pauper. |
1882 | The Stolen White Elephant. |
1883 | Life on the Mississippi. |
1885 | Huckleberry Finn; The Private History of a Campaign That Failed. |
1889 | A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court. |
1892 | Merry Tales; An American Claimant. |
l893 | The 1,000,000 Bank Note. |
1894 | Tom Sawyer Abroad; Pudd'nhead Wilson. |
1896 | Joan of Arc. |
1897 | How to Tell a Story and Other Essays; Following the Equator. |
1900 | The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg and Other Stories and Essays. |
1902 | A Double-Barrelled Detective Story. |
1904 | Extracts From Adam's Diary; A Dog's Tale. |
1905 | King Leopold's Soliloquy. |
1906 | The $30,000 Bequest and Other Stories; Eve's Diary; What Is Man?; Chapters From My Autobiography. |
1907 | Christian Science; A Horse's Tale. |
1909 | Is Shakespeare Dead?; Extract From Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven. |
1962 | Letters From The Earth (written in 1909). |