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Loading... Moby Dick, Or, the White Whale (original 1851; edition 2010)by Herman Melville
Work detailsMoby Dick by Herman Melville (1851)
On June 28, 1949, I said: Reading Moby Dick. Pretentious and--curse of curses--mid-19th centuryish. On July 1 I said: Reading Moby Dick. Should be something of an expert on whaling when I'm finished. Tis loaded with purely descriptive chapters. Of course, I will say that Melville does write somewhat entertaingly if stiltily. On July 9 I said: Finished Moby Dick today. It had a good ending and wasn't really so awful though it had pages and pages of intrinsically non-interesting stuff. I ought to know all about whaling now, but I don't know that I do. In the end, Moby Dick sinks the whole ship "Pequod," only the narrator of the story surviving! ( )A blurb on the cover of the book that I am now reading promises that it "comes with a cast-iron guarantee that you will read to the very end". Moby Dick, alas, comes with no such guarantee. Melville's frequent digressions are as biblical in proportion as they are in style and likely cause many readers to heave the book over the gunwale. For the most part, though, I enjoyed these tangents, probably because Moby Dick does not really have much of a storyline to digress from. The many distractions are more interesting than the main attractions, Ahab and the Whale. What did tempt me to abandon the book at times was Ahab himself - the old man does go on so. Fortunately and surprisingly, he does not actually figure that prominently in the book. And really, putting up with Ahab is a small price to pay for spending time with the wonderful Ishmael, whose patience, tolerance, and curiosity make for companionable reading, and whose fathomless love for all things pertaining to whales and whaling is the book's great revelation. Moby Dick was published within a few months of David Copperfield, and apart from the fact that both have memorable opening lines ("Call me Ishmael," and "Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that station will be held by anybody else, these pages must show"), the two novels could not be more different. Moby Dick seems so modern, inventive, and more transparently the work of a literary genius and risk taker. And yet David Copperfield, for me at least, is a more pleasurable read and a more likely re-read. It has a nicely packaged narrative, while Moby Dick is a blubbery beast of a tale. Melville was at the mercy of his muse while Dickens seemed to own his. But here's the thing: decades after my first reading both books, I couldn't tell you one thing about David Copperfield, while even Melville's little Pip remains vivid to me, alone and losing it out there in that vast, empty sea. Ironically, though I had difficulties staying with Melville, he has succeeded in staying with me. DNF!(Did NOT Finish!) Tried to read this in 2010. Edition I had was over 500 pages. Got to page 175, and couldn't take anymore! I know it's considered a classic for the themes it represents, but I just couldn't get through it. Just not my cup of tea. I read for sweeping adventure, sci-fi, fantasy, let me escape stuff. Waaay to much descriptive style here for me. If there was an abridged version, with just the adventure parts, I would read it. But that would only be about 50 pages...I know. At least I tried... Incredible. "It was the whiteness of the whale that above all things appalled me." One of my favorite books. no reviews | add a review Is contained inRedburn, Whitejacket, Moby Dick by Herman Melville Works of Herman Melville by Herman Melville Moby-Dick (Norton Critical Edition) by Herman Melville Four American Novels (The Scarlett Letter/ Moby Dick/ The Red Badge of Courage/ The Bridge of San Luis Rey) by Edward Fuller Has the adaptationMoby Dick [adapted - Great Illustrated Classics] by Shirley Bogart Moby Dick by Herman Melvillle, abridged and adapted by Jan Needle by Herman Melville Moby-Dick: A Pop-Up Book by Sam Ita First Classics Illustrated: Moby Dick by Herman Melville Moby Dick [adapted - Moby Illustrated Classics] by Herman Melville Moby Dick (Dalmatian Press Adapted Classic) by Herman Melville Moby Dick (Great Classics for Children) by Herman Melville Moby Dick: Level 2 by Herman Melville Marvel Illustrated: Moby Dick by Herman Melville Herman Melville: Moby Dick (Ll 5) by Feidelson Moby Dick [adaptation - Pocket Classics - comic strip/graphic novel] by Herman Melville Moby Dick: the Screenplay by Ray Bradbury Moby Dick [film - 1956] by John Huston Classics Illustrated: Moby Dick by Herman Melville Moby Dick: A Play for Radio from Herman Melville's Novel by Henry Reed Is abridged inMoby Dick: Or, the White Whale (An Abridged Edition) by Herman Melville Herman Melville: Moby-Dick or, The Whale Presented by Jan Needle by Jan Needle InspiredHas as a reference guide/companionIs a commentary on the text ofHas as a student's study guide
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(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 08 Sep 2010 05:18:25 -0400)
A classic of the sea, telling of the pursuit of Moby Dick, the white whale who defied capture.
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26 editions of this book were published by Audible.com.
Penguin AustraliaFour editions of this book were published by Penguin Australia.
Editions: 0142437247, 0142000086, 0143105957, 0141198958