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Comparing Humor. Mark Twain v. Bill Bryson. Key Ideas and Details. What specific regional elements of place and time does Twain bring to light in Life on the Mississippi ? Twain evokes small-town life along the Mississippi River in decades before the Civil War.
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Comparing Humor Mark Twain v. Bill Bryson
Key Ideas and Details • What specific regional elements of place and time does Twain bring to light in Life on the Mississippi? • Twain evokes small-town life along the Mississippi River in decades before the Civil War. • What specific place and time does Bryson bring to life? • Bryson evokes family life in an Iowa household during the 1950’s. • What do boys in these two different setting have in common? • Both boys are observant of the details of their settings; both seem to have happy childhoods.
Key Ideas and Details • Identify a human foible, or flaw, that is emphasized in Bryson’s memoir. • Eccentric food preferences • Identify a foible Twain spotlights in one of his works. • Smiley’s compulsion to bet on anything • For which foible do you have greater sympathy? Why?
Key Ideas and Details • Note one example each of hyperbole and incongruity in Bryson’s memoir. • Hyperbole: The fruitcake dates to the colonial period. • Incongruity: The father prefers burned food. • Identify one example of each of these devices in Twain’s story “The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.” • Twain’s father can hang anyone that offends him. • The town boys envy the boy on the boat for scrubbing rusty bolt. • Which examples do you find funny? Explain.