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Week 12: Chapter 130 to END!
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Sarah
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Jan 27, 2012 07:17AM

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At the end, after carefully focusing attention on the whale and Melville's discursions, I found myself disappointed to return to the people and terribly sympathetic to the whale, despite wanting Starbuck, Stubbs and Ishmael (who HAD to make it) to survive and knowing they wouldn't.
It was like rereading King Lear and hoping Cordelia would survive.
In retrospect, for a reread, I'd be really interesting in just how the extensive detail and poetry about whales and whaling, the attitudes influenced by Sartor Resartus (the mock philosophical-expert voice,) function to create the ultimate effect of Moby-Dick -- because they seem to be a very large part (most) of the story.
How this functions, whole and parts, seems of enormous interest.

Anyway, I've been here for a few weeks. You know, cleaning up the tavern for the "Welcome home!" party. Too bad so few sailors are here to tell their tales. But you only need ONE, after all.

I too was surprised that the ultimate conflict between Ahab and the whale was so brief and in the very final pages of the book, but I suppose there wasn't anything else to do or say after that except that brief postscript.



I like that idea Kitty and I can see that having experienced his sense of humor now. I'm afraid the long wait for that climactic scene probably contributed to the novel's lack of success in its day.

I remember the first time I read it, these passage reminded me of the story of Ulisses as narrated by Dante, our most important and famous poet, in his Inferno: a man who wouldn’t stop where all the others did, because he wanted to know. And he made all his
ship mates fallow him to destruction.

The two things that gave me pause during the reading was the already mentioned narrative switching between 1st person and 3rd person.(Certainly Ishmael couldn't have known what Ahab said to Starbuck in private.) The other was the handling of the Fedallah
crew. I think Melville built up a certain mystery about Fedallah, then left that plot cold and went on to several chapters of description.
Thanks to S and NewEngland for putting the Group together and to the crew members for their insightful comments!
Anyone pursuing more Melville in the near future? I want to read Israel Potter and Typee, then maybe to the more difficult "Confidence Man" and his long poem "Clarel."




So many big books out there that I haven't jumped into.


I read Anna Karenina last year and really liked it. I'm now half way through Brothers Karamazov but stopped it several months ago for other reading projects and never got back to it. I need to finish it.

impressed, put the book down, or return it and get your $1 back! Or, search M&D on Goodreads and read some of the reviews, don't think there's a bad review in the bunch. I've read all of Pynchon up and including M&D with one asterisk - I got to page 476 in Gravity's Rainbow and ran out of steam. I hate when that happens it's like having a pea under your mattress - intend to go back and finish at some point. "Against the Day" is an even bigger Tome than M&D 1300-1400 pages, but I'm interested in how Pynchon handles the 1890's after hitting a Home run with the pre-revolutionary time!


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailing_...


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailing_..."
Yes..."Sailing to Philadelphia". I actually like all the experimentation in different styles that Knopfler is doing. I think his voice blended well with Taylor in this song.
Kitty wrote: "I read Don Quixote last year on my own. I definitely would find it exhilarating to read with you all ."
Sounds like we're may have a mini group started for next year. Judy, you and me so far.

I've read earlier translations up to around p. 150 -- MUCH further than earlier dalliances with Moby Dick.

Nabokov published a book of Lectures on DQ which I have. Although he called it "a crude book!" I can see how DQ was a precursor to "Pale Fire."





Actually, NE, Dante's Inferno is another of those classics I want to read. I know I read excerpts while in college but not the full work.

I might be up for Cervantes or Dante next year.
Most immediately I'm leading a discussion on Brain Pain on Eliot's "The Waste Land" starting March 5 and following it with The Great Gatsby in the context of "The Waste Land" and to a lesser extent Conrad's "Heart of Darkness"


Another thing to remember about DQ - the last stages of the Inquisition were still active when Cervantes was writing DQ. In my earlier readings of DQ, I found this very interesting indeed! Kudos to Cervantes for being able to write successfully within such a straight-jacketted society!




http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/1...
The moderator does respond and one or two other members, from my experience, however many threads are pretty much dead. There is some interesting archive threads - Hershel Parker, the Melville Biographer is still, I believe, a member of the group and has participated in this group.

I've lamented over the fact that the only other Melville group seems long dead. Instead of trying to resurrect it, I thought that perhaps creating a new group altogether might stimulate interest. For that reason, I've created a new Melville group. Please feel free to join, and to invite people that you know that might be able to add to the discussion. I'm hoping that, in addition to general discussions, perhaps we can get some group reads going on as well.
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/6...