
The Innocents Abroad
by Mark Twain
"The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain is a travel book published in 1869. It humorously chronicles Twain's five-month voyage through Europe and the Holy Land aboard the steamship Quaker City in 1867. Twain contrasts his experiences with grandiose contemporary travelogues, satirizing fellow travelers, profiteering locals, and the commercialization of history. He particularly scrutinizes the gap between romantic expectations and reality, from trivial anecdotes at Gibraltar to disillusionment in the Holy Land. The book became Twain's best-selling work during his lifetime.
Related Subjects
Bookshelves
Related books
Round Cape Horn Voyage of the Passenger-Ship James W. Paige, from Maine to California in the Year 1852
J. (Joseph) Lamson
Early Australian Voyages: Pelsart, Tasman, Dampier
John Pinkerton
Olla Podrida
Frederick Marryat
Van de Ganges naar den Amazonenstroom De Aarde en haar Volken, 1904
Ernst Weber
The Circe of the deserts
Paule Henry-Bordeaux
Travel Tales in the Promised Land (Palestine)
Karl May
Seven Legs Across the Seas: A Printer's Impressions of Many Lands
Samuel Murray
Under Sail
Felix Riesenberg