The Edward T. LeBlanc Memorial Dime Novel Bibliography

Item - The Sandwich Islands as Seen By Mark Twain

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(New York Weekly edition - source: Stanford Libraries)
(New York Weekly edition - source: Stanford Libraries)
(New York Weekly edition - source: Stanford Libraries)
(New York Weekly edition - source: Stanford Libraries)
(New York Weekly edition - source: Stanford Libraries)

Combined Summary

Online Full Text: Stanford Digital Repository (New York Weekly edition) (Note: Pages three and four are missing and not indexed in the Stanford Digital Repository for this particular issue.)
Stanford Digital Repository (New York Weekly edition)
Stanford Digital Repository (New York Weekly edition)
Stanford Digital Repository (New York Weekly edition)
Stanford Digital Repository (New York Weekly edition)
Series: New York Weekly v. 22 no. 17 — letter one, page 2
New York Weekly v. 22 no. 19 — letter two, page 6
New York Weekly v. 22 no. 21 — letter three, page 7
New York Weekly v. 22 no. 27 — letter four, page 6
New York Weekly v. 22 no. 32 — letter five (conclusion), page 2
Author: Twain, Mark, 1835-1910
Dates: March 14, 1867 (New York Weekly edition)
March 28, 1867 (New York Weekly edition)
April 11, 1867 (New York Weekly edition)
May 23, 1867 (New York Weekly edition)
June 27, 1867 (New York Weekly edition)
Edition Description: New York Weekly edition (letter one, page 2 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 17, March 14, 1867):
[In giving these letters to the public we desire to say that we have seldom read anything more deeply interesting. The author, it will be seen, is a very close observer. Nothing worth noticing escapes his view, and the reader can gain more solid information concerning the Sandwich Islands from reading these papers than from a perusal of any work yet written. "Mark Twain" is an exceedingly graphic writer, and while he discourses like a philosopher of men and things, there is at the same time a vein of quiet humor running through his letters which is irresistible. We hope that no reader of the N. Y. Weekly will fail to peruse these inimitable and really valuable papers from week to week.-Ed. N. Y. Weekly.]
First Sentence: We arrived here to-day at noon, and while I spent an hour or so talking, the other passengers exhausted all the lodging accommodations of Honolulu. (New York Weekly edition)

Known Editions

New York Weekly edition (letter one, page 2 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 17, March 14, 1867)
New York Weekly edition (letter two, page 6 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 19, March 28, 1867)
New York Weekly edition (letter three, page 7 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 21, April 11, 1867)
New York Weekly edition (letter four, page 6 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 27, May 23, 1867)
New York Weekly edition (letter five (conclusion), page 2 in New York Weekly, v. XXII, no. 32, June 27, 1867)

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