A rich compendium of Herman Melville's greatest short works. Billy Budd, Sailor, Bartleby the Scrivener, Benito Cereno, and the complete short stories make a rich addition to any library.
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Herman Melville (1819-1891) was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet who received wide acclaim for his earliest novels, such as Typee and Redburn, but fell into relative obscurity by the end of his life. Today, Melville is hailed as one of the definitive masters of world literature for novels including Moby Dick and Billy Budd, as well as for enduringly popular short stories such as Bartleby, the Scrivener and The Bell-Tower.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE Collection to buy...,
This review is from: The Great Short Works of Herman Melville (Mass Market Paperback)
This edition of Melville's short fiction is, I think,the best...certainly a real bargain at this price. In this one volume, the reader gets all of Melville's short fiction -- plus the novella, *Billy Budd, Sailor* (the Harrison Hayford/Merton M. Sealts, Jr. "definitive" Reading Text published by the Univ. of Chicago in 1962). The collection is edited and has an excellent "Introduction" by Warner Berthoff. The selections are each preceded by a very informative "Note" which tells you when the piece first appeared and in what periodical. Berthoff also supplies in each "Note" delicious suggestive context insights...which help the appreciative/analytical/interpretive process begin to percolate. The 1st selection is "The Town-Ho's Story" (a chapter from Melville's novel *Moby-Dick*). But this chapter was printed in *Harper's New Monthly Magazine* in October 1851 (according to Berthoff's "Note")as a portion of a work-in-progress. The collection presents the pieces in the CHRONOLOGICAL order of their publication in various magazines. But it also contains "The Two Temples," which Berthoff says was rejected for publication. So, the collection contains all of Melville's "short" fictional pieces, including prose pieces meant to accompany poems. These pieces in the collection include: "The Marquis de Grandvin," "Three 'Jack Gentian Sketches,'" "John Marr," and "Daniel Orme." The collection concludes with *Billy Budd, Sailor." All of the *Piazza Tales* are in this collection along with "The Piazza " piece, itself. This is a fine collection. The Northwestern/ Newberry editions of Melville's works are nice, but expensive. And you would have to get 2 separate volumes to also get the *Billy Budd, Sailor* which you get included in this one volume. However, what the N/N edition of Melville's prose pieces gives you which this collection by Berthoff does not (their title is: *The Piazza Tales and Other Prose Pieces: 1839-1860*)are: "Fragments from a Writing Desk" (1839), Melville's inspired essay of idolatry and insight, "Hawthorne and His Mosses" (17 and 24 Aug. 1850), many other uncollected pieces, Melville's reconstructed lectures from his stint as a public speaker/"performer" (Yikes!) "Statues in Rome," "The South Seas," and "Traveling." There are also copious notes, scholarly information, photo facsimiles, and other helpful items in the N/N edition. But, unless you are a scholar, a Melville fanatic, or financially unfrugal, BUY this edition by Berthoff and published by the Perennial Library of Harper & Row. * * * * * * * * *
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ah Bartelby!,
By Sirin (London, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Great Short Works of Herman Melville (Perennial Classics) (Paperback)
This is worth buying if only for the masterpiece that is Bartelby the Scrivener. One of the all time great short stories, it tells the story, narrated by an employer in a Wall Street Law office who finds a peculiar scrivener called Bartelby in his employ.
Bartelby is initially a quiet and efficient copyist, but when asked to undertake extra work, he deflects it with the simple rejoinder 'I would prefer not to.' He repeats this mantra, over and over, calmly and without malice. 'You will not?' thunders his employer in frustration, 'I prefer not,' says Bartelby. And with that simple 'I prefer not', Bartelby strikes a blow on behalf of all the inconspicuous millions who find themselves wasting their lives, their creative human potential, in drab, workaday office jobs, counting down the months of their lives staring at a computer screen, the sterile hum of life passing them by. All the tedium of office life is in Bartelby - anyone who has worked in such an environment will recognise the compulsive snacking, the drab natureless view out the window, the modes and systems of the company affecting the consciousness and behaviour patterns of the staff. Bartelby, simply and effectively, questions all of this with his quiet actions, heading off in another direction from the common herd, unpicking the knot at the end of the string that binds all corporate paperwork together. Hurrah for Bartelby, whose quiet, tragic existence unravells the whole rope, and hurrah for his legacy - for without Bartelby there would be no Camus, there would be no 'Something Happened' by Joseph Heller, no 'And Then we Came to the End' by Joshua Ferris, the masterful debut office novel published this year. To read Bartelby, to devote a valuable hour of your life to Melville's pioneering existentialist story, is to momentarily glimpse a chink in the darkness, a sense of what might and could be, instead of the living death that a great many people trudge through, like the dead in T.S. Eliot's poem 'The Wasteland', trudging over London Bridge on their way to work.
11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
truth comes in with darkness,
By
This review is from: The Great Short Works of Herman Melville (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the beginning of American literature. And these short works I think tell the tale more clearly than that confusing (though still great) big book Moby Dick. Melville wrote from an outsiders perspective and he was an outsider as perhaps all Americans were because we did not yet have an identity as a people. Melville explores our institutions of justice and our ability to comprehend life through them in Billy Budd in the way a foreigner would examine justice and understanding in a land whose logic he was unfamiliar with. He seems to ask "how will our sense of justice be different than France's or England's and therby make us a different nation than theirs?" or even more simply "Is real understanding(of ourselves, or others) ever possible?" Melville is very much the anti-idealist in a work like The Piazza in which one valley dweller imagines existence on the upper slopes to be grander than his own only to travel there one day and be made aware of the opposite. So there is no dreaming colonist in Melville, in him we have a measured study of ourselves as we were in his day, and perhaps still are, a dreaming people,a restless people with only the vaguest notions of what life and its true nature is. The strangest story in this collection is Benito Cereno which is perhaps the work which most defines a democratic nation's uneasy alliance of peoples and points of view. In that work there is no one defining perspective, only differing views of one event that remains disturbingly unclear as all of Melville's worlds are. In Melville we have an author defining what we are or perhaps more importantly what our problems will be in the future. Interesting short works full of that rare kind of insight that does not seem to be trapped in its time but somehow seems to have seen what is to come. There is the idea that a new nation has of itself and a confidence that in the works of Melville is challenged. The mystery in these works is the mystery at the heart of existence and life remains inscrutable even here in this new land with its new ways. In Moby Dick the innocent Ishmael is the only one spared, in Billy Budd(Melville's last tale) the innocent is the one sacrificed. Melville's vision is not a comfortable one. The strange Bartelby,the Scrivener is a tale where personality is consumed by an impersonal system. The story strikes an odd alienated tone which will later be taken up by Kafka and Pynchon and countless others.
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