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  • If This Party Gets Any Livelier, a Funeral Might Break Out!: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 7 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/07/12
    Chapter seven of The Chronicle of Young Satan is the darkest chapter of the season, and there's no way to soften it. Nikolaus is going to drown in twelve days — Satan has already told the boys so — and the chapter is an unbearable countdown to a death his friends know is coming and can't prevent or explain. He drowns trying to rescue a missing girl, Lisa Brandt, who drowns with him. Twain calls those final eleven days some of the most precious of Theodore's life, and somehow that's not a contradiction.We dig into how the grief radiates outward from there. Lisa's mother curses God and swears never to pray again; a carpenter seizes her daughter's body as payment for an unpaid debt and buries her in a cattle yard, reported with a matter-of-factness that's almost more disturbing than outrage would be. When the boys beg Satan to help the grieving mother, he does — by rewriting someone else's fate without that person's knowledge or consent, sending a man named Fisher to hell in the process for something he does in a moment of anger that wouldn't have happened otherwise. Satan can't understand why this troubles them. He's never felt sorrow. He only understands it theoretically.We also get into purgatory — Satan claims it's been discontinued for not paying for itself — and an honest tangent into "souling," the real historical practice that became trick-or-treating. This is late, bleak, fully cynical Twain, and we walked away convinced he might be darker than Poe ever was.
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    45 分
  • A Whole New World: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 6 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/07/05
    Chapter six of The Chronicle of Young Satan takes a hard turn from sibling squabbles into something genuinely devastating. Theodore tries to talk his sister Lily out of her infatuation with Philip Traum, fails completely, and that night Satan wakes him for a tour of the world that lands, somewhat arbitrarily, in China — though almost nothing about China actually makes it onto the page. What follows is the real heart of the chapter: Satan's long explanation of why humanity means nothing to him (he compares it to an elephant's indifference to a red spider) and how every human life is a chain of cause and effect that cannot be altered once the first link falls — except by him.He proves it by skipping one link in the life of Nikolaus, one of the three boys. Instead of sleeping through a storm, the boy gets up to close a window. That two-minute delay changes everything: instead of heroically saving a drowning girl and surviving forty-six years as a blind, deaf, paralyzed invalid begging for death, he will simply drown alongside her in twelve days. Satan presents this as the kinder outcome and waits for Theodore to agree, which he does — and that agreement is somehow the most unsettling part of the whole conversation.We dig into why this cold, efficient version of fate-rewriting hits so differently than something like It's a Wonderful Life, Theodore's devastating mental catalogue of every small cruelty he's ever inflicted on his soon-to-be-dead friend, and the long-running joke of Bartel Sperling, the unseen village rival who once went to Vienna and has never been forgiven for it. We also finally learn Father Adolf's fate: he's stuck on the dark side of the moon, mentioned with the same flat tone as everything else.
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    1 時間 10 分
  • Everybody Loves Satan!: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 5 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/06/28
    Five weeks in Eseldorf and everybody loves Satan — which is turning out to be almost as much of a problem as if they hated him. Philip Traum has been charming the whole village, pulling a famously fat man out of a river without getting his clothes wet, refusing to fill out the standard form for strangers, and generally making things worse for everyone who is supposed to love someone else. The Witch Commission has not summoned Father Adolf for questioning, even though everyone watched him get possessed in the market square, because nobody wants to be the one to say it first — which is, Twain notes, exactly the cowardice they're criticizing the Commission for.We dig into a chapter that runs like a three-camera sitcom: Theodore's family is mid-conversation about Philip Traum when Lily's actual suitor Joseph Fox walks in, then Wilhelm Meidling — Margit's suitor and a man in open romantic freefall — walks in from the other direction, and then Satan himself shows up and Wilhelm grabs a butcher knife. The knife drops to the floor. For just a moment, something dangerous flashes in Satan's eyes. Then he tells everyone Wilhelm was only playing, sits down with him, and reconstructs all four chess games from memory in roughly fifteen seconds. The key detail Twain slips in: it never occurred to Satan to notice that Joseph's courtship of Lily had evaporated the moment he walked into town. He wasn't trying. He just does this.We also cover Theodore's mother talking herself into Satan as a potential in-law, the rattlesnake defense, and the Aeolian harp — a string instrument played entirely by wind that is genuinely one of the coolest things that has come up this season.
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    58 分
  • It’s A Devil of a Time in Eseldorf: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 4 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/06/21
    Chapter four of The Chronicle of Young Satan is where Eseldorf stops being a quirky medieval village and starts being a place where people get burned. The witch panic has expanded beyond old women — it's anyone now, children as young as eight or nine — and Twain illustrates this with two stories that land hard: eleven convent schoolgirls starved and isolated until one confessed to dancing with Satan at the sabbath (the commission fed her every detail from a papal checklist two centuries old), and Gottfried Narr's grandmother, who confessed immediately and voluntarily, because she'd done the math on her options.Into this atmosphere, Father Adolf spots his opening. Margaret's mysterious wealth — the cat's contributions, the lavish spreads, the wine nobody can explain — has people talking. He sends spies in disguised as friends, tests samples of the food, and when it stays real and rots on a normal schedule, decides that proves it's a new kind of witchcraft. Then he crashes her party for forty guests, and Satan slides into him like a transparent film and fills a wine bottle from a two-pint bottle, tells the room "it is nothing, anybody can do it," juggles a hundred brass balls in the market square, and walks a tightrope blindfolded. The crucifix doesn't help. This is Twain at his most subversive — and it's also exactly the scene Paine-Duneka reassigned to a made-up astrologer in the fraud version, because having the devil publicly humiliate an anointed priest was apparently too much.The chapter ends with Satan at Margaret's, playing Wilhelm's poem back as a full orchestral performance on a jangly old spinet, and Wilhelm correctly identifying him as the devil.
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    ---
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    1 時間 7 分
  • Cats and Dogs! Living Together! Catholic Mass Hysteria!: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 3 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/06/14
    Chapter three of The Chronicle of Young Satan is where Twain's argument starts to land. Father Peter is in jail — Father Adolf has remembered losing exactly the right number of ducats at exactly the right time — and the whole town has rediscovered how little they ever liked Father Peter and Margaret anyway. Into this walks Young Satan, who spends the chapter debating theology with a housekeeper, explaining the French-speaking conditions in hell, healing a dog's eye, and delivering the most coldly convincing case against the moral sense that Twain ever wrote.The moral sense, Father Peter says, is God's greatest gift: the ability to tell right from wrong. Young Satan takes Theodore to a factory in France where workers do fifteen-hour days in filth and poverty while the very holy proprietors profit, and explains: only beings with the moral sense can choose wrong on purpose. Animals kill, but they don't build systems. They don't torture for fun. They don't drive a dog's eye from its socket and then fall off a cliff and lie there while the dog spends two days trying to get someone to come help the man who beat him. That last part actually happens. Satan heals the eye, talks to the dog in dog, and sends the boys to find Hans Oppert dying at the bottom of a cliff. The priest refuses last rites. Seppi takes the dog home and wonders if God will forgive Hans since the dog already did.We also dig into why fairy money turns to dirt but Satan's gold stays gold, why Paine-Duneka's astrologer is a less interesting villain than Father Adolf in every way, and what the Malleus Maleficarum has to do with Santa Claus coming down the chimney.
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    ---
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    • Every Minute of Everything Everywhere All at Once
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    1 時間 17 分
  • "MISTER Satan is My Uncle!": The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 2 • The Devil According to Mark Twain
    2026/06/07
    The ChapterChapter two of The Chronicle of Young Satan is where we finally meet our narrator and his two friends — Theodore Fisher, Nikolaus Bauman, and Seppi Vohmeier, three boys with the run of a medieval Austrian castle town who spend their days swimming, boating, and smoking. They're sitting on their favorite hilltop in the woods when a handsome, pleasant stranger appears out of nowhere, lights their pipes without being asked, and within minutes has them completely and helplessly enchanted. His name, offered without drama, is Satan. His uncle is the one you're thinking of.The ConversationWe dig into what makes this version of the devil so unsettling and so fresh. Young Satan — who asks to be called Philip Traum in public, Traum being the German word for dream — isn't scheming or tempting or brooding. He's just utterly, cosmically indifferent to human life, in a way that reads less like evil and more like a force of nature that happens to be chatting with you. He produces fruit in the boys' pockets without flourish, makes clay animals and then a whole tiny village, brings them to life, and then smashes them when they get noisy — wiping the clay off his fingers on his handkerchief and continuing the conversation without missing a beat. The boys are horrified. Satan literally cannot understand why.What really lands is the passage where the boys physically cannot leave even after watching him kill people. Twain writes that Satan's voice is like a fatal music, that the boys are drunk with the joy of being near him, that they feel ecstasy from the touch of his hand. It reads less like a magic spell and more like the scariest version of charisma imaginable — not nefarious, not even intentional, just what he is. Meanwhile, Twain has him list humanity's faults in a tone of mild, detached curiosity, the way a person might observe bricks or manure. And at the end of the list, delivered with special disdain: the moral sense. File that one away.The chapter ends with Father Peter — the good disgraced priest from chapter one — finding a wallet filled with gold coins right where Satan was standing, the boys unable to tell him where it came from, and Father Peter doing the most scrupulously honest thing possible with unexpected money. Whether that's enough to protect him from what's coming is a different question.We Also DiscussThe astrologer: a character who appears in the Paine-Duneka fraud version but not in Twain's original manuscript, apparently invented to replace Father Adolf as Father Peter's antagonist, and why that change makes no sense and also requires you to accept that a bishop would take the word of a wizardFelix Brandt, the oldest serving man in the castle, who taught the boys to smoke, drink coffee, and not be afraid of ghosts — because ghosts are just lonely and want compassion — and once saw an incubus, which raises questions nobody asked him to answerThe Wild Huntsman, Odin's court, and how supernatural legends of the 18th century are inevitably colored by the author's own time period no matter how hard they tryThe American tall tale tradition of Satan leaving gold in the ground and letting human greed do the rest, from The Devil and Tom Walker through All That Money Can Buy and now hereThe moral sense: what it is, why young Satan says it with contempt, and why Twain is going to keep coming back to itChapter three is next week. Father Peter has gold he didn't earn, a boy named Philip Traum is wandering around Aseldorf, and nobody suspects a thing.LinksThe Devil's Details show page/archiveBanana for Scale Facebook GroupConnect with Kynan on Instagram or LetterboxdConnect with Lester on Facebook, Instagram, or X---Learn more about supporting this podcast by becoming a member. It's just $5/month or $55/year. Visit our website to learn more.Check out the other podcasts in the Banana for Scale family of podcasts:Every Minute of Everything Everywhere All at OnceThe Exorcist Minute
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    55 分
  • The Mysterious Mix-Up: The Chronicle of Young Satan, Chapter 1
    2026/05/31
    The Chronicle of Young Satan opens in Eseldorf — or Assville, if you speak German — a small Austrian village in 1702 where it is still the Middle Ages and Twain makes clear it intends to stay that way. Chapter one has no devil in it yet. It has something arguably more interesting: a town built entirely around the idea that knowledge is dangerous, goodness is suspicious, and the loudest most frightening priest is the most respected one.We dig into the two priests who set up everything that follows. Father Adolf — "the Town Bull," "Hell's Delight" — has met Satan in person and thrown things at him, which earns him both reverence and a wide berth, because even the devil deserves a certain respectful tone and Father Adolf absolutely does not use one. Father Peter, the gentle one who may have said God loves everybody, is living in disgrace. His niece can no longer teach music. The moneylender is about to take their house. A Hussite woman was quietly distributing Bibles to the literate and being prosecuted for heresy. Twain hasn't introduced his mysterious stranger yet. He doesn't need to. The world he's describing is already doing the work.We also sort out the manuscript situation one more time for clarity: we're reading The Chronicle of Young Satan, Twain's original unfinished text, available free at the Mark Twain Project. The published version called The Mysterious Stranger is a fraud assembled by his executor without disclosure. The wine bottle versus inkstand debate is real and we have opinions.READ THE CHRONICLE OF YOUNG SATAN FOR FREE HERE.
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    43 分
  • Nightmare Fuel! The Mysterious Stranger - Claymation Clip From The Adventures Of Mark Twain!
    2026/05/24
    Welcome to our Mark Twain season — and we're starting not with the book but with five minutes of 1985 Will Vinton claymation that has been living rent-free in the corners of the internet ever since someone uploaded it to YouTube and titled it exactly right: The Mysterious Stranger. Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, and Becky Thatcher step through a door in Mark Twain's flying Wonkavator into a black void, meet a being made of earth who introduces himself immediately as Satan, creates a tiny clay village, and then destroys it. The whole thing is rated G. We cannot stress this enough.We dig into what makes this depiction of the devil genuinely one of the best we've encountered: an empty suit of armor with no head, no body, just a white masquerade mask held up on a stick — a devil who exists in a form humans literally cannot perceive and helpfully provides a face so we can follow the conversation. The dual-layered voice, the flowers he grows over the rubble after smashing the villagers who were fighting over an ox, the camera shift that puts us at the clay people's eye level during the earthquake so we're no longer watching a toy world from above but trapped inside it — it all adds up to something that has no business being as affecting as it is. And then Satan says "people are of no value, we could make more sometime if we need them" while his mask turns into a skull, and the kids run.We also cover who Mark Twain actually was before he became the version of himself that used Satan as a mouthpiece for everything he thought about the human race — and why that dark late-period Twain is who we're here for this season.One more thing: We lied. Not on purpose, but still — the book we told you to read doesn't exist. Not exactly. When Twain died in 1910 he left behind three unfinished manuscripts, and his literary executor Albert Bigelow Paine stitched them together, filled the gaps with his own writing, published the whole thing as The Mysterious Stranger in 1916, and told no one. Scholars didn't catch it until the 1960s. So we're pivoting: this season we're reading The Chronicle of Young Satan — Twain's actual words, the manuscript the claymation scene actually came from — and you can read it free at the Mark Twain Project. Link below. Sorry about that. Blame Paine. You can read THE CHRONICLE OF YOUNG SATAN for free at marktwainproject.org:https://www.marktwainproject.org/writings/mysterious_stranger_mss/chronicle/chapters/The Devil's Details show page/archiveLearn more about supporting this podcast by becoming a member. It's just $5/month or $55/year. Visit our website to learn more.Banana for Scale Facebook GroupCheck out the other podcasts in the Banana for Scale family of podcasts: Every Minute of Everything Everywhere All at OnceThe Exorcist MinuteConnect with Kynan on Instagram or LetterboxdConnect with Lester on Facebook, Instagram, or X---Learn more about supporting this podcast by becoming a member. It's just $5/month or $55/year. Visit our website to learn more.Check out the other podcasts in the Banana for Scale family of podcasts:Every Minute of Everything Everywhere All at OnceThe Exorcist Minute
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    1 時間