Herman Melville

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Herman Melville: A Biography: Volume 1, 1819-1851

Author: Hershel Parker
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Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
The first of a two-volume project, this book by a life-long scholar of Melville’s life, works, and milieu pinpoints the facts of Melville’s life with great accuracy and completeness. Melville here appears amid the all-too-human hopes and anxieties that inspired and ensnared him during his early career, when he passed from the status of America’s first literary symbol to that of a still-young man who dared to write Shakespearean prose.
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Reviews

Amazon.com

It seems incredible that an actual human being stands behind the works of Herman Melville, and we rightly expect a biography to show us that real, tangible man. When Melville made his debut in England, reviewers thought his books must have been the products of an esteemed English gentleman disguising himself under rough Yankee cloth. It was simply inconceivable that any American could produce such noble prose, or that any author could have lived the briny life Melville describes. Hershel Parker finds that life not unimaginable, but difficult to distill. His book is monumental in size and definitive in detail. Readers looking for a digestible portait of one of America’s favorite authors may find this well researched book a bit rich (remember this is just Volume I), although it does reveal many new insights into Melville’s life and family background. Regardless, Parker’s book is a significant scholarly work and essential to serious students of this American master.

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