English language

Published Nov. 13, 2022 by Oxford University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-19-885369-5
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5 stars (1 review)

Moby-Dick has a monumental reputation. Less well known are the novel's unexpectedly weird, funny, tantalizing, messy, and wondrous moments. Narrator Ishmael, along with the whaleship Pequod's other "meanest mariners, and renegades and castaways", is beguiled into joining Captain Ahab in his vengeful pursuit of the white whale that "dismasted" him. But along the way, Ishmael takes the reader along many a detour into variegated ways of knowing. In a tone "strangely compounded of fun and fury", Moby-Dick brings outlandish curiosity to bear on the multitudinous, oceanic scale of our diverse world.

Oxford World's Classics

Edited by a leading Melville scholar, past president of the Herman Melville Society, and a participant in the 38th Voyage of the Charles W. Morgan, the world's last surviving wooden whaleship and the sister ship to the Acushnet, in which Melville sailed

Introduction highlights a little-known annotation in Hawthorne's copy of Moby-Dick

An edition for the …

18 editions

the weirdest wildest thing and can't wait to reread

5 stars

I did it! I finished reading Moby-Dick, a book I discovered in grad school for the 50-book exam (Penn's weird version of comps, which is even weirder because the year my cohort took it, it was more like 75 books and we were the only group subject to what every agrees was a mammoth failure of a list) and of which I only read a handful of chapters because who has the time to read the whole thing when we also had to read Leaves of Grass, Little Dorrit, Canterbury Tales (maybe all?), Emily Dickinson (all), Middlemarch, Ulysess, and so much more? But I loved those few chapters and have meant for decades to go back and read the whole thing and finally, inspired by Hester Blum's new edition and my trip to New Zealand, I started in on it for real in December 2022 and have been slowly working …