Moby Dick -- Herman Melville, Paperback
With an Introduction by Elizabeth Renker
and an Afterword by Christopher Buckley
Author: Herman Melville
Publisher: Signet Book
Published: 07/02/2013
Pages: 624
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.66lbs
Size: 6.75h x 4.20w x 1.05d
ISBN: 9780451532282
Review Citation(s):
Entertainment Weekly 11/20/2015 pg. 118
About the Author
Herman Melville's (1819-91) father's bankruptcy and death in 1832 deprived him of higher-educational oppotunities and alienated him forever from a conventional view of life. He taught school, sailed to Liverpool and back, then shipped before the mast on a Pacific whaling voyage. He deserted at the Marquesas Islands, living for a month among the cannibal Typee natives. An Australian whaleship then took him to Tahiti, where he was jailed for mutiny, but he escaped and spent some months as a beachcomber. A third whaleship took him to Hawaii, where he lived for some months before sailing home with the crew of the frigate United States. From these adventures came his popular and increasingly imaginative travel romances: Typee (1846), Omoo (1847), the allegorical Mardi (1849), Redburn (1849), White-Jacket (1850), and his masterpiece, Moby-Dick (1851). Melville married in 1847. His later works of fiction were not sea romances and sold poorly. He gave up professional writing and for twenty years served as a customs inspector in New York, where he died. Billy Budd, written in his last years, was published for the first time in 1924, on the crest of a Melville revival that began about 1920 and continues to the present day--a revival that has established him among the greatest American writers.
Product Tags:
Action & Adventure, Classics, Fiction, Herman Melville, Literature - Classics / Criticism, Paperback, Sea stories, Signet Book, Signet ClassicsContact form
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