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A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

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A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court

Written by: Mark Twain
Narrated by: Nick Offerman
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About this listen

Praise for Nick Offerman narrating Mark Twain:

“Offerman’s Illinois-raised voice and actor’s talent suit him ideally to channel Mark Twain.” (The New York Times Book Review)

“There’s something about his wry Midwestern merriment that aspires to Twainishness.” (Men’s Journal)

“It’s a melding of sardonic voices: Mark Twain, meet Nick Offerman.” (The Wall Street Journal)

With his trademark mirth and boundless charisma, actor Nick Offerman brought the loveable shenanigans of Twain's adolescent hero to life in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Now, in yet another virtuosic performance, the actor proves that despite being separated by a span of over a century, his connection to the author and his work is undeniable and that theirs is a timeless collaboration that should not be missed. Trading in the idyllic banks of Twain's Mississippi for medieval England, Offerman regales listeners with one of American literature's foremost satires and the author's most inventive and darkly funny pieces of fiction.

Hank Morgan is the archetype of modern man in 19th-century New England: adept at his trade as a mechanic, innovative, forward thinking. So when a blow to the head inexplicably sends him back in time 1300 years and places him in Camelot, instead of despair, he feels emboldened by the prospect placed before him and sets out to modernize and improve the lives of his fellow citizens. But, in order to do so, he'll need to contend with brash nobles, superstitious nincompoops, and a conniving, blowhard wizard.

While time travel has become a common trope in storytelling today, in Twain's time it was truly a novel idea; all the more imaginative when you consider how it's used for satirical effect. A thinly veiled critique of the political and social institutions that impede progress and a scathing condemnation of the naiveté that allows them to thrive, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court saw Twain's biting wit and sharp tongue honed to a fine point.

Told primarily through Hank's first-person perspective, Offerman effortlessly captures the Yankee's straightforward, matter-of-fact gruffness. Like Offerman - whose woodworking skills are the stuff of legend - Hank is a natural builder of things and his can-do, by-the-bootstraps spirit finds its vocal foil in Offerman's crisp delivery. But it's in Offerman's ability to convey the myriad characters and absurdities Hank faces that makes this an incomparable listening experience: the flowery embellishments and insane braggadocio of knights; the lilting, feathery sing-song of Clarence; the garrulous, long-winded pomp of the aristocracy; the old, dithering windbag pronouncements of Merlin. Offerman plays each of these with a humor and humanity that Twain himself would have enjoyed.

Public Domain (P)2017 Audible, Inc.
Classics Arthurian Witty Celebrity Science Fiction Funny Time Travel Fiction
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I found this book forced me to have many stunning revelations! There is a passage speaking to the fact that people must stand for democracy and the republic not the institutions surrounding them. The institutions are put in place as supports for democracy and they can go off course so people must be willing to stand for the freedom of democracy itself. The whole book is begging people to wake from a brainwashed state and take what they are due. Brilliant.

Really good and quite relevant!

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An all-time Classic, narrated by Nick Offerman. You really an't go wrong with this one.

A Twain Classic.

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Very perceptive observations with much skewering of laws and elites pretentiousness. Twain would have a field day with today's state of affairs.

Nick Offerman enhances the story immensely.

Very enjoyable, especially the narration

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Odd, fun, quite the forward thinking especially during g his era, clever, silly, nice shake up if my usual reading.

Twain has such a delightfully different literary style

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For the first 20 minutes I didn’t think I’d enjoy this book. There were a lot of Middle English words and it was hard to follow. It changes to modern English after that and becomes an easy listen.
Nick Offerman does a superb job with the narration; I will be looking for other audio books that he narrates in the future.
This was my first Mark Twain book, and after this it won’t be my last. I really enjoy his style of story telling. It has time travel, knights and royalty, science and the main character is an engineer. What more could you ask for?

Amazing Read (Listen)

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