EVERYONE Has Read This but Me - The Catch-Up Book Club discussion

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Moby-Dick or, The Whale
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Moby-Dick or, the Whale - Buddy Read
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Tr1sha
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Nov 07, 2020 01:06AM

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Storm, thank you for sharing that link. I found it very interesting. I always wanted to know more about this but couldn't find a reliable source.

For which, thank you!"
Don't worry, Saanj! Take your time. Enjoy the book and please do benefit from everyone's research. That's what buddy reading is about. hahahah!

I loved that sentence as well, " clove to Queequeg like a barnacle". I could really picture it and laughed out loud when I read it. I agree with the foreshadowing. Chapter 19, 20, 21 had a lot more of it. I'm quite excited to meet Ahab but afraid of what's coming as well.

Some of my thoughts based on the last few chapters we read:
(view spoiler)

I agree, even though I haven’t caught up yet. I’ve just been reading everyone’s comments on the first few chapters. Thank you to those who explained some of the details or provided links to more information. This book is a huge surprise, one of those books I always thought I should read but expected to be boring. I’m so pleased it’s a buddy read, I don’t think I would have attempted this book alone but am enjoying it.

I've been reading each day as scheduled but not had a chance topost thoughts the last couple of days. So I'm catching up:
Chapter 19 - The Prophet
(view spoiler)
Chapter 20 - All Astir
(view spoiler)
Chapter 21 - Going Aboard
(view spoiler)
Chapter 22 - Merry Christmas
(view spoiler)
Chapter 23 - The Lee Shore - I have questions???
(view spoiler)
Chapter 24 - The Advocate
(view spoiler)


Ch. 32 Cetology
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cetol...

THOUGHTS Chapters 25 - 33
I won't go through these individually -needless to say we FINALLY meet Ahab and also get some of the Whale chat that I've been expecting for a while.
I loved meeting the crew - the 3 mates Starbuck, Stubb and Flask and also their counterpart Harpooneers Tashtego and Dagoo.
AHAB
(view spoiler)
So I feel like we're just scratching the surface of the men on the ship and life aboard. The character of Ahab still seems far away - as if we're being shown glimpses of him from far off. We haven't really heard much from him directly yet but have been given hints of what's to come.
The Cetology chapter was the heaviest/slowest reading yet. I found it interesting but the difficulty arose in knowing what we know today and trying to figure out how much corresponded with what Ishmael had categorised. Thanks again @Frances for the useful link.
So we carry on...
How is everyone finding it so far?
Enjoying it more or less than you expected?
I feel like I really loved the first few chapters and it's slowed down a bit since they signed on the Pequod but I expect it to pick up again soon.

I really enjoyed the description of the crew but not the chapter on whales. I think it is information which I will never use but take up space in my brain.
Frances@ thank you for the link. Now my dreams will have the right visuals :)

THOUGHTS Chapters 25 - 33
I won't go through these individually -needless to say we FINALLY meet Ahab and also get some of the Whale chat that I've been..."
I agree, Laura. You summed up a lot of my feelings perfectly. It has definitely slowed down & been less entertaining. The Cetology chapter was hard work, I thought - if that had been Chapter 1, I wouldn’t have continued reading the book! Apart from that, I’m enjoying the book far more than I expected. Unusually for me, I’m using an audiobook for some of it & am finding it very helpful as when I switch back to the ebook I still imagine the narrator’s voice & that has helped a lot.



I also felt that the book slowed a little event wise but I really like the character exposition. It's picking up steam again tho, we probably won't have to wait much to see some action.

Chapter 10 &11: (view spoiler)
Chapter 12: (view spoiler)
Chapter 14 & 15: Lots of history of Nantucket
Chapter 16: (view spoiler)
Chapter 17: Unknown Word: Plum-pudding voyage: a short whaling-voyage in a schooner or brig, confined to the north of the line, in the Atlantic Ocean Only.
Chapter 18: So... Bidad and Peleg are not making a great impression on me. Also, why can't they get Queequeg's name right? Ish says it SEVERAL times.
FUSTRATION
Overall: I adore this story.

I agree about the foreshadowing! I'm full of trepidation!
I've just finished Chapters 34: The Cabin Table - 39:The First Night Watch
THOUGHTS & QUESTIONS!!!!
(view spoiler)
So after a few slower chapters I feel like we're back on pace and I'm loving it again!


It's getting exciting again!
Also I'm loving the language and turn of phrase - noticing a lot of alliteration and beautiful imagery.
THOUGHTS etc
(view spoiler)
Overall I'm finding Ishmael's narration of this part - since they joined the ship actually - more detached than the beginning of the book. Sometimes it's hard to know what his involvement or feeling was about the events he's decribing. He seems to be keeping himself a bit removed from the narration - anyone else feel this?
So many thoughts!
LOVING it again :)

THOUGHTS & Qs
Chapter 49 - The Hyena
(view spoiler)
Chapter 50 - Ahab's Boat and Crew. Fedallah
(view spoiler)
Chapter 51 - The Spirit - Spout
(view spoiler)

There is some more action at sea, or stories of action at sea anyway! It's definitely gearing up for something - I can feel suspense building.
@Kaisser - (view spoiler)
THOUGHTS
(view spoiler)
We're getting further out to sea and I'm still being happily borne along by this tale!

https://lithub.com/the-literal-and-fi...

How are you all faring? May I just say that if not for Kaisser's schedule and this group, I would have given up several chapters back. This is such a wordy book. And I am starting to feel like I am reading between the lines. As pretty as Melville's prose sounds, I find myself spacing out and wondering what it was that I just read. I end up having to read the chapters 3x...and probably just making an "educated guess" at what he meant. I wish I were a literature major and that I had a professor pointing out the little nuggets in each chapter to me. As is, it is good that the chapters have clear headings such as the above-mentioned, or I might truly be lost as to what Melville was referring to. 🙄
I did enjoy the Cetology and "Monstrous" and "Less Erroneous Pictures" of the whales as I am a 🐋 geek.

@Frances, it truly is a wordy book. I haven't needed to use an English dictionary so much before this one. I would be lying if i said I understood the The Line chapter completely. I did like that quote (view spoiler) However, I'm feeling rewarded. So far it's been such a beautiful experience and well worth the work.
About chapter 59
(view spoiler)
Chapters 61-63
(view spoiler)
Lately there have been a bunch of whaleboat chapters. I get confused with all the terminology. I found this diagram of a whaleboat useful:
(view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

Also thank you for the boat diagram - definitely very helpful!
CHAPTERS 61: Stubb Kills a Whale - 66: The Shark Massacre
(view spoiler)
Some more, slightly gruesome, action and a further insight into the process of the whale hunt.
I'm still loving this book. I feel like we're more about the process than the characters right now though. Looking forward to some more character driven passages.
How's everyone doing?

But I truly love this book, and I can't stop wondering at all the people who have ever told me it's "just about a guy chasing a whale". It really isn't... to me it's subtly funny, beautifully written, adventurous, with a wonderful atmosphere, and likable characters, each with their own unique personality. Also it's not half as wordy and meandering at getting to the point as so many other classics I've read. It reads more like an adventure novel in the vein of Verne, who I also like a lot.
One of my favourite lines so far comes from an early chapter, when Ishmael ponders religion:
"Heaven have mercy on us all —Presbyterians and Pagans alike—for we are all somehow dreadfully cracked about the head, and sadly need mending."
I smiled really wide at this, and saved it immediately :)

But I tr..."
Hey Nori - I totally agree! I'm not sure why people are so down on this book. I'm loving it! Glad you're enjoying too.

Ugh! I just finished readingThe Old Man and the Sea, and right now I am
👍#teammarlin
👍#teamwhale
and definitely
👎 #teamshark
👎 #teamfisherman
I know what you mean about having your face scrunched up while reading, @Laura. I was grimacing and wincing. And having read TOMATS for the House Challenge was NOT a good idea at this point in time. NO Sirree!!!


My face stayed scrunched up! :)
And - once again I have some questions?
(view spoiler)
Also I'm taking so many vocab notes - learning lots of new (to me) words during this book!

In 2016/17 I spent 3 months working on a tiny island off the Antarctic Peninsula on an historic base.
There were a lot of whaling artefacts on the island and we used to give cruise ship visitors a presentation about this history of the place - it's interesting to me now putting these items I've seen into some sort of context based on this book.
In case you are interested here is a link to where I worked - it is called Port Lockroy - Goudier Island. It was an amazing experience!
https://www.ukaht.org/discover/port-l...

@Kaisser, @Laura, I don't want to give anything away, but now would be the best time to read this. It's only 96pp.
*Brace yourselves.

In 2016/17 I spent 3 months working on a tiny island off the Antarctic Peninsula on an historic base.
There were a lot of wh..."
@Laura, you have lived such an interesting life!

https://youtu.be/27nX3Dsv9Xk
It's harder to draw the line when it comes to violence towards animals that we consume personally as food versus what we don't consume/utilize. Currently, we don't utilize blubber anymore for its oil. And I personally don't eat whale. I would have a hard time eating pork or beef if it came from a pig or cow I had petted or personally fed. I have eaten fish that I have personally caught though. I think compassion develops with the connection to a semi-intelligent creature?
What are your thoughts?

@Frances- thanks for the link to the show.
I agree it's interesting how we distance ourselves from the killing of animals we eat. I grew up on a croft (small-holding) in the Highlands of Scotland and was surrounded by animals we ate - hens/duck/geese/pigs. Also my dad shot deer on the croft which we also ate so I think I always associated the death of the animal as something necessary to our eating of it.
I think it's a good awareness to have - I hope it makes me appreciate my food more!
I would struggle to eat whale - the wastefulness of the process and the threat of endangerment are concerns.
I watched a really interesting film set in the Faroe islands about the whales hunted by the island community. It's a clever, complex film showing that their subsistence whaling is an integral part of their island heritage - not straightforward but very informative.
https://theislandsandthewhales.com/

I loved The Mat Maker chapter. I went and reread the quote from "Loom of Time" and "The Whiteness of the Whale" several times. I also enjoyed "The Lowering". The book has been action-packed in the last few chapters.
Stubb has been quite funny at times. He seems to be growing on me. Two specific instances I found hilarious: (view spoiler) I miss Queeqeg quite a bit.

Chapter 12: "Thought he, it's a wicked world in all meridians. I'll die a pagan." The thought of which is mirrored several times in the nex..."
@Andy, I too found these lines from chapter 12 very interesting. I tried to picture how the ship looked based on the description. For some reason, I keep picturing pirate ships.

I, too, enjoyed Ishmael's narration of the Town Ho's story. He sounded so different from the narrator of the book. I think he must have quite a bit older while he narrated that to his friends.


As for The Old Man and the Sea, I read it last week and quite enjoyed it. (view spoiler)

In 2016/17 I spent 3 months working on a tiny island off the Antarctic Peninsula on an historic base.
There were a lot of wh..."
Laura, this sounds quite interesting. I'm sure it was quite an experience! Reading MD must have brought back so many memories.
Books mentioned in this topic
In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex (other topics)Why Read Moby-Dick? (other topics)
House of Leaves (other topics)
The Old Man and the Sea (other topics)
The Old Man and the Sea (other topics)
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