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Moby Dick or the White Whale
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Moby Dick or the White Whale

Moby Dick or the White Whale

$173.25

Original: $495.00

-65%
Moby Dick or the White Whale

$495.00

$173.25

The Story

6b Herman Melville. Boston: L. C. Page & Company, twelfth Impression, September, 1926.

Notes

Moby-Dick is a sprawling, epic narrative that chronicles the sailor Ishmael’s voyage aboard the whaling ship Pequod. The plot is driven by the monomaniacal obsession of its commander, Captain Ahab, who seeks violent retribution against the giant white sperm whale that maimed him on a previous journey. Melville’s masterpiece is far more than a simple adventure; it is an encyclopedic novel that weaves together technical details of 19th-century whaling with deep philosophical meditations on religion, fate, and the indifference of the natural world.

Herman Melville experienced a meteoric rise and a devastating fall during his lifetime. While his early South Seas adventure novels were popular successes, Moby-Dick was a monumental commercial and critical failure upon its 1851 release. Critics were baffled by its complex structure and dense prose, and the book sold poorly before falling out of print. Deeply embittered and struggling with debt, Melville eventually retreated from the literary world to spend twenty years working as a quiet customs inspector in New York City. He died in 1891, largely forgotten by the public and considered a "failed" author.

The destiny of the novel changed forever during the "Melville Revival" of the early 1920s, a cultural shift that finally recognized the book as a visionary masterpiece ahead of its time. This twelfth impression from September 1926 is a direct artifact of this explosion in popularity, printed during the decade that cemented Moby-Dick as the quintessential "Great American Novel." In the years following this 1926 printing, the book transitioned from a forgotten failure into an inescapable pillar of world literature. Its legacy now spans across every medium, having inspired countless academic studies, artistic reinterpretations, and cinematic epics, proving that Melville’s voice was just waiting for a future generation to truly understand its depth.
Description
Original blue cloth binding with gilt lettering and illustration to upper board and spine. Damp-stain to top edge. Some fraying to head and foot of spine with four corners bumped and slightly frayed. Very attractive 1920s binding fully intact. Fine condition overall.
Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 3

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 4

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 5

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 6

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Moby Dick or the White Whale - Image 7

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Description

6b Herman Melville. Boston: L. C. Page & Company, twelfth Impression, September, 1926.

Notes

Moby-Dick is a sprawling, epic narrative that chronicles the sailor Ishmael’s voyage aboard the whaling ship Pequod. The plot is driven by the monomaniacal obsession of its commander, Captain Ahab, who seeks violent retribution against the giant white sperm whale that maimed him on a previous journey. Melville’s masterpiece is far more than a simple adventure; it is an encyclopedic novel that weaves together technical details of 19th-century whaling with deep philosophical meditations on religion, fate, and the indifference of the natural world.

Herman Melville experienced a meteoric rise and a devastating fall during his lifetime. While his early South Seas adventure novels were popular successes, Moby-Dick was a monumental commercial and critical failure upon its 1851 release. Critics were baffled by its complex structure and dense prose, and the book sold poorly before falling out of print. Deeply embittered and struggling with debt, Melville eventually retreated from the literary world to spend twenty years working as a quiet customs inspector in New York City. He died in 1891, largely forgotten by the public and considered a "failed" author.

The destiny of the novel changed forever during the "Melville Revival" of the early 1920s, a cultural shift that finally recognized the book as a visionary masterpiece ahead of its time. This twelfth impression from September 1926 is a direct artifact of this explosion in popularity, printed during the decade that cemented Moby-Dick as the quintessential "Great American Novel." In the years following this 1926 printing, the book transitioned from a forgotten failure into an inescapable pillar of world literature. Its legacy now spans across every medium, having inspired countless academic studies, artistic reinterpretations, and cinematic epics, proving that Melville’s voice was just waiting for a future generation to truly understand its depth.
Description
Original blue cloth binding with gilt lettering and illustration to upper board and spine. Damp-stain to top edge. Some fraying to head and foot of spine with four corners bumped and slightly frayed. Very attractive 1920s binding fully intact. Fine condition overall.