ONLY $9.90 DELIVERY INFO

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Moby Dick or The Whale

Punjabi / English

Herman Melville

$28.95

Paperback

In stock
Ready to ship

QTY:

Punjabi
Fingerprint! Publishing
01 April 2015
Call me Ishmael, from Moby-Dick, is one of the world literatures most famous opening lines. In this outstanding work, Ishmael, the narrator, recounts the epic story of the insane quest that he becomes a part of as he boards the whale ship Pequod. It is the story of Captain Ahab, the vengeful whaler, and his pursuit of Moby Dick, the elusive white whale, who on a previous voyage destroyed his boat and left Ahab a crippled and obsessive monomaniac. The insanity and the blind need for vengeance evokes fear and doubt in his crew members as Ahab threatens to lead the ship and all its members to an adventurous, yet increasingly, precarious culmination. Will Ahab recognize his own madness before the high seas of vengeancewhere Moby Dick awaits their intertwined fateengulfs everyone? D.H. Lawrence called Moby-Dick one of the strangest and most wonderful books in the world, and the greatest book of the sea ever written. It stands alongside James Joyces Ulysses and Laurence Sternes Tristram Shandy as a novel that appears bizarre to the point of being unreadable but proves to be infinitely open to interpretation and discovery.
By:  
Imprint:   Fingerprint! Publishing
Dimensions:   Height: 128mm,  Width: 192mm,  Spine: 41mm
ISBN:   9788175992771
ISBN 10:   8175992778
Pages:   664
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Moby Dick or The Whale (1851), written by Herman Melville, is considered an outstanding work of Romanticism and the American Renaissance. Born in New York City in 1819 into the American aristocracy, Herman Melville started to write in the winter of 1844-45, aged twenty-five. He wrote nine novels plus many short stories in eleven years, and initially with considerable commercial success. He wrote Typee (1846), which was a bestseller, as was the sequel Omoo (1847), after which he wrote Mardi (1849). He was known to have read Rabelais and for being deeply inspired by Shakespeare. In his final years he had been working on the manuscript of Billy Budd Sailor, which was left unfinished at his death and published only in 1924.

See Also