How I Edited an Agricultural Paper is one of Mark Twain’s sharpest short humor pieces, and in miniature-book form it feels especially fitting—small in size, but packed with wit. The essay recounts Twain’s disastrous attempt to run a farming newspaper despite knowing nothing about agriculture, leading to absurd advice, angry readers, and escalating chaos. Through exaggerated mishaps and deadpan irony, Twain pokes fun at pretension, “expert” authority, and the gap between theory and real experience. It’s a perfect snapshot of his early comic genius: playful, satirical, and still laugh-out-loud funny.

