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  <title><![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]></description>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[Essentially a variation on the most despised-by-me and vomitously pretentious literary genre, the literary pilgrimage.  ]]></body>
    
  <url><![CDATA[http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/60610193]]></url>
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      <review>
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    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[I am about 1/3 way done with this one and I really have enjoyed it so far.  I couldn't find the edition I have on this website but mine is dense with footnotes that take away from the original text.  They explain things any native speaker of English would know or be able to figure out.  But they do ...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5015059">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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      <review>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[a great companion piece to melville's book.  much more enjoyable than that doorstop.]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Search of Moby Dick: Quest for the White Whale]]>
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    <![CDATA[Historian and adventurer Tim Severin has made a career of retracing epic voyages. He crossed the Atlantic in an open boat of stretched leather to test whether a sixth-century Irish monk could have made a fabled journey to North America, and later explored the Spice Islands of eastern Indonesia to see how the archipelago has &quot;evolved&quot; since 19th-century naturalist Alfred Wallace first surveyed it. The quest for the white whale, however, lands Severin in different territory: the shifting currents of fiction. Following tenuous evidence of pale sperm whales, Severin embarks for the South Pacific and the birthing grounds of Melville's masterpiece. On Nuku Hiva, the setting for <em>Typee</em>, he finds that the island harbors &quot;many of the sources that Melville had raided to embellish his own, rather thin, experiences.&quot; Also thin is any evidence of a white whale, so he moves on to Pamilican, a dirt-poor little scrape where the locals subsist on jerry cans of imported fresh water and by &quot;jumping&quot; the sea's bounty. Their principal prey is the whale shark, the largest fish in the sea. Artists of the jump actually wrestle these plankton eaters underwater by hand, hooking the beasts with a massive grappling hook before coming up for the fight on board. One ancient hunter speaks vaguely of having jumped a white whale shark, but there are also rumors of giant white manta rays and other fantastic creatures.<p> The centerpiece of the book is a visit to the little-known island of Lamarala, the &quot;last community on earth where men still regularly hunt sperm whales by hand.&quot; An old-timer with 60 years of whaling notched into his harpoon explains enthusiastically that the white whale &quot;has visited us many times. Sometimes it can be a wicked fellow.&quot; Severin's gripping firsthand account of an actual hunt gives credence to a 1993 report of 34 Lamaralese fishermen being towed out to sea for four days by a big bull sperm whale. But does he find Moby-Dick's kin? In a manner of speaking. What surfaces in these pages is not so much the white whale as the <em>idea</em> of the white whale--a creature bathed in mystery and the people that speak knowingly of it, all of whom give meaning to the sea. <em>--Langdon Cook</em></p>]]>
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