Goodreads Librarians Group discussion

This topic is about
Herman Melville's Moby-Dick
Questions (not edit requests)
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Keeping critical texts separate
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Unfortunately, that's all we have to work with. The librarian's note is all the tool we have, so it has to be used. I'd prefer to have the extra text rather than have to separate those many works later on.

The assault on the eyeballs of having a librarian's note attached to every single one of Bloom's books is worse than having to separate.
I'm not sure, though, why one edition of Modern Critical Interpretations would be 246 pages and another one, 159 pages. Other than simply additional critical essays, which is probably what it is. The later edition has more essays. Those should still be combined together, though, even though one has more content.
I'll separate the Bloom's Notes out.
As to your first question, I suppose the best way is to make sure the novel is always attributed to Melville, whereas the Bloom books are attributed to Bloom. Yes, sometimes people don't know what the Bloom books are so they'll elevate Melville to primary author....I guess a librarian's note could help. Maybe. Sometimes they get ignored. Incidentally the author of the novel should not be listed as a secondary author of a Bloom Critical Interpretation, because they aren't. A Bloom Critical Interpretation is merely a book of essays on the novel.