Herman Melville: Redburn, White-Jacket, Moby-Dick (LOA #9)Well over a century after its publication, Moby-Dick still stands as an indisputable literary classic. It is the story of an eerily compelling madman pursuing an unholy war against a creature as vast and dangerous and unknowable as the sea itself. But more than just a novel of adventure, more than an encyclopedia of whaling lore and legend, Moby-Dick is a haunting, mesmerizing, and important social commentary populated with several of the most unforgettable and enduring characters in literature. Written with wonderfully redemptive humor, Moby-Dick is a profound and timeless inquiry into character, faith, and the nature of perception. LIBRARY OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1979 to preserve our nation’s literary heritage by publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America’s best and most significant writing. The Library of America series includes more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average 1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that will last for centuries. |
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - gregdehler - LibraryThingRead Redburn, which is a great tale of a sailor from NY across the Atlantic to Liverpool and back. This was Melville's first novel. Young Redburn was very naive and I saw a lot of a young me in him ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - SamSattler - LibraryThingThis is not a "review" of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. Another one of those wouldn’t do much good. What follows are simply my thoughts and impressions on finally finishing a book that I first ... Read full review
Contents
How Wellingborough Redburns Taste for the | 7 |
Redburns Departure from Home | 15 |
How He Disposed of His FowlingPiece | 25 |
He Is Initiated in the Business of Cleaning | 35 |
He Is Put into the Larboard Watch Gets Sea | 46 |
The Sailors Becoming a Little Social Redburn | 53 |
He Is Very Much Frightened the Sailors Abuse | 59 |
He Gives Some Account of One of His Shipmates | 66 |
A Manofwar College | 712 |
Manofwar Barbers | 717 |
The great Massacre of the Beards | 722 |
The Rebels brought to the Mast | 730 |
Old Ushant at the Gangway | 732 |
Flogging through the Fleet | 737 |
The Social State in a Manofwar | 741 |
The Manning of Navies | 745 |
He Has a Fine Day at Sea Begins to Like | 74 |
The Melancholy State of His Wardrobe | 85 |
At Dead of Night He Is Sent Up to Loose the MainSkysail | 90 |
The Cook and Steward | 93 |
He Endeavors to Improve His Mind and Tells of One Blunt and His DreamBook | 98 |
A Narrow Escape | 105 |
In a Fog He Is Set to Work as a BellToller and Beholds a Herd of OceanElephants | 108 |
A Whaleman and a ManofWarsMan | 112 |
The Highlander Passes a Wreck | 115 |
An Unaccountable CabinPassenger and a Mysterious Young Lady | 119 |
He Begins to Hop About in the Rigging Like a Saint Jagos Monkey | 127 |
QuarterDeck Furniture | 131 |
A Sailor a Jack of All Trades | 133 |
He Gets a Peep at Ireland and at Last Arrives at Liverpool | 137 |
He Goes to Supper at the Sign of the Baltimore Clipper | 144 |
Redburn Deferentially Discourses Concerning the Prospects of Sailors | 150 |
Redburn Grows Intolerably Flat and Stupid over Some Outlandish Old GuideBooks | 155 |
With His Prosy Old GuideBook He Takes | 165 |
The Docks | 176 |
The Irrawaddy | 187 |
The Old Church of St Nicholas and the Dead | 196 |
The DockWall Beggars | 205 |
Placards BrassJewelers TruckHorses | 212 |
Redburn Roves About Hither and Thither | 220 |
His Adventure with the Cross Old Gentleman | 228 |
Redburn Introduces Master Harry Bolton to | 237 |
Harry Bolton Kidnaps Redburn and Carries | 246 |
HomewardBound | 260 |
A Living Corpse | 267 |
CHAPTER | 277 |
CHAPTER | 284 |
CHAPTER 53 | 292 |
Drawing Nigh to the Last Scene in Jacksons | 300 |
Almost a Famine | 308 |
The Last End of Jackson | 320 |
Redburn and Harry Arm and Arm in Harbor | 328 |
The Last That Was Ever Heard of Harry Bolton | 337 |
Herein are the good Ordinances of the Sea which wise Men who voyaged round the World gave to our Ancestors and which constitute the Books of t... | 665 |
Night and Day Gambling in a Manofwar | 671 |
The Maintop at Night | 676 |
Sink Burn and Destroy | 684 |
The Chains | 689 |
The Hospital in a Manofwar | 693 |
Dismal Times in the Mess | 700 |
How Manofwarsmen Die at Sea | 703 |
The Last Stitch | 706 |
How they Bury a Manofwarsman at Sea | 709 |
What remains of a Manofwarsman after his Burial at Sea | 710 |
ETYMOLOGY | 780 |
Loomings | 795 |
The Carpet | 801 |
The Counterpane | 820 |
The Street | 827 |
The Pulpit | 834 |
A Bosom Friend | 846 |
CHAPTER 12 | 852 |
Nantucket | 860 |
The Ship | 866 |
First NightWatch | 975 |
CHAPTER 41 | 983 |
The Whiteness of the Whale | 993 |
Hark | 1002 |
The Affidavit | 1009 |
Surmises | 1018 |
CHAPTER 48 | 1024 |
The Hyena | 1035 |
CHAPTER SI The SpiritSpout | 1041 |
CHAPTER 53 | 1047 |
Monstrous Pictures of Whales | 1073 |
Of Whales in Paint in Teeth | 1082 |
Squid | 1088 |
The Pequod meets the Virgin | 1169 |
The Honor and Glory of Whaling | 1180 |
Pitchpoling | 1186 |
The Tail | 1194 |
Schools Schoolmasters | 1212 |
Heads or Tails | 1220 |
Ambergris | 1230 |
CHAPTER 94 | 1238 |
CHAPTER 96 | 1244 |
Stowing Down Clearing | 1250 |
The Pequod meets the Samuel Enderby | 1259 |
The Decanter | 1266 |
CHAPTER 123 | 1340 |
The Log and Line | 1348 |
Ahab and the Carpenter | 1356 |
The Cabin Ahab and | 1363 |
The Pequod meets the Delight | 1370 |
CHAPTER 133 | 1377 |
The Chase Second | 1387 |
The Chase Third | 1396 |
EPILOGUE | 1408 |
Chronology | 1409 |
CHAPTER 17 | 1420 |
Notes | 1423 |
Other editions - View all
Herman Melville: Redburn, White-Jacket, Moby-Dick (LOA #9) Herman Melville No preview available - 1983 |
Herman Melville: Redburn, White-Jacket, Moby-Dick (LOA #9) Herman Melville No preview available - 1983 |