- Published: 1 July 2010
- ISBN: 9781407066189
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 672
Moby-Dick
'I love Melville' Donna Tartt
'The ultimate fish story' Bob Dylan
'The ultimate fish story' Bob Dylan
When Ishmael sets sail on the whaling ship Pequod one cold Christmas Day, he has no idea of the horrors awaiting him out on the vast and merciless ocean. The ship's strange captain, Ahab, is in the grip of an obsession to hunt down the famous white whale, Moby Dick, and will stop at nothing on his quest to annihilate his nemesis.
- Published: 1 July 2010
- ISBN: 9781407066189
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 672
Other books in the series
Praise for Moby-Dick
A great book...a deep great artist
D.H. Lawrence
A masterpiece
Guardian
A wonderful delight
Nathaniel Philbrick
Moby Dick is my favourite novel, bar none. It works on so many levels. It taught me that you can have a top layer of narrative - like the seafaring story - and then below that all those wonderful, rich, symbolic things going on
Clive Barker
Osama bin Laden's name and face have become so numbingly familiar to Americans as in effect to obliterate any history he and his shadowy followers might have had before they became stock symbols of everything loathsome and hateful to the collective imagination. Inevitably, then, collective passions are being funnelled into a drive for war that uncannily resembles Captain Ahab in pursuit of Moby Dick
Edward Said
To convey an adequate idea of a book of such various merits as that which the author of Typee and Omoo has here placed before the reading public, is impossible in the scope of a review. High philosophy, liberal feeling, abstruse metaphysics popularly phrased, soaring speculation, a style as many-coloured as the theme, yet always good, and often admirable; fertile fancy, ingenious construction, playful learning, and an unusual power of enchaining the interest, and rising to the verge of the sublime, without overpassing that narrow boundary which plunges the ambitious penman into the ridiculous; all these are possessed by Herman Melville, and exemplified in these volumes
London Morning Advertiser, October 24 1851
What a book [Moby-Dick] Melville has written! It gives me an idea of much greater power than his preceding ones. It hardly seemed to me that the review of it, in the Literary World, did justice to its best points
Nathaniel Hawthorne