This novel powerfully conveys the allure of the sea, and of the ships that do battle with its creatures. And Parini's evocation of Melville's relationships is moving... In his dealings with his wife, his friend Nathaniel Hawthorne, and the young men who people his story, he becomes a tragic figure, finally rendered heroic by his capacity to feel.

* Observer *

Parini's eminently readable narrative convincingly fills in hitherto dark places. [This novel] will not replace the standard biographies; it will, however, add flesh to their bones.

- John Sutherland, * Financial Times *

[A] compelling novel...What is most rewarding about this richly detailed book is Parini's ability to frame a story of heroic faiure with the knowedge that its subject will one day triumph.

- Stephen Amidon, * Sunday Times *

Se alle

Parini's novel is a bravura and often engrossing attempt to blend the disparate strands of Melville's art and life in two perspectives.

- Philip Hoare, * Guardian *

A thrilling tale... [Parini] has the knack for finding just the right phrase. ... There is much to admire in this novel.

* Independent on Sunday *

Who would have thought it would have taken until now, the twenty-first century, to get a clear view of America's most mysterious novelist, Herman Melville? We have it now, through the magic of Jay Parini's superior novel.

- Gore Vidal,

Parini, a poet, biographer and literary critic as well as a novelist, can write with admirable lyric intensity.

* Scotsman *

In fiction and biography, Jay Parini has brought to life Tolstoy, Frost, Faulkner, Benjamin, and Steinbeck. Now he has added Herman Melville to that remarkable pantheon, and the tale is surprising, insightful, and deeply moving. Melville has never seemed more alive to me - and more human.

- Chris Bohjalian, author of Secrets of Eden, The Double Bind, and Midwives,

Once again Jay Parini has taken us in literary imagination, cultural history, and biography through his ingenious fiction. In elegant and moving prose, Parini opens up Melville..... A novel of startling and inventive journeys, and no reader will come away from it seeing Melville the same.

- Peter Balakian, author of Black Dog of Fate,

Jay Parini, against all odds, captures his white whale of a subject and then frees him for us to behold. [He] re-animates Melville to startling effect: the creator walks as a character; the genius turns back into a husband; imperishable literature springs from the accidents of life.

- Tom Mallon, author of Fellow Travelers and Henry and Clara,

Herman had often walked these streets, eyeing the forest of tall ships, their blackened strakes handsomely curved, masts like crosses, empty of sails . . .

1841. A young Herman Melville is yet to write Moby Dick. He sets out on a voyage aboard a whaling ship. What happens on that trip will give him enough material for a lifetime of writing.

But what of the dark things Melville encounters on his journey, and the illicit relationships he embarks upon that are to torment him once he returns home to his wife Lizzie? All is revealed as Jay Parini lifts the lid on one of the greatest writers of the nineteenth century . . .

Les mer
<p><b>The story of an American literary giant's extraordinary life from the author of<i> The Last Station<br /></i></b></p>
The story of an American literary giant's extraordinary life from the author of The Last Station

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781847679802
Publisert
2012-01-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Canongate Books
Vekt
313 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
464

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Jay Parini is Axinn Professor of English at Middlebury College, Vermont. His six novels also include Benjamins Crossing and The Apprentice Lover. His volumes of poetry include The Art of Subtraction: New and Selected Poems. In addition to biographies of John Steinbeck, Robert Frost and William Faulkner, he has written a volume of essays on literature and politics, as well as The Art of Teaching. He edited the Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature and writes regularly for the Guardian and other publications.