The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 8月2日 04時24分
Herman Melville may have gotten the idea to write about a mad hunt for a fearsome whale during an ocean voyage, but he wrote most of “Moby-Dick” on land, while living in a farm with his wife, his sisters, and his mother. The young and dashing writer became a celebrity following the publication of his first two books—gripping accounts of his adventures at sea. But what he really sought was the solitude and freedom to write fiction. On the 200th anniversary of his birth, tap the link in our bio to read Jill Lepore on Melville’s beloved Berkshires farm. Illustration by @carsonellis.
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marlanwarren
Didn't Nathaniel Hawthorne give Melville money to keep him financially afloat because Hawthorne was successful and Melville was struggling?
cslesq
The only novel I ever used Cliff Notes for in HS. I tried recently to read it again. No go. And this article about him was boring, too.
kerrigan.joanne
Did not like the novel , read it freshman yr in college ; my professor was creepy maybe that influenced my attitude toward the novel
sawyera363
Celebrity ... perhaps. But as I understand it his books were not well received and he died believing himself a failure.
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