Since the age of Vikings, sagas have always told a story. Often they were robust accountings of great battles, brave action or outrageous behavior.
Having performed as the spirited Ghost of Mark Twain for a quarter-century, McAvoy Layne knows how to spin a good story, especially shocking ones about Nevada. It was during the height of state's Comstoke Lode bonanza that a young writer, one Samuel Clemens, first used his pen name, Mark Twain.
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