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1851:Nantucket. Sea. Revenge. Madness. Oops. Adrift |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
A NOVEL LOOK AT THE NOVEL |
2022-04-27 |
#8628 |
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Its author shouldn't "waste his strength on such purposeless and unequal doings as these rambling volumes about spermaceti whales" |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
REAL REVIEWS OF THE NOVEL |
2021-03-08 |
#8351 |
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"The Whiteness of the Whale" |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
NOVELS BY CHAPTER TITLES |
2020-01-27 |
#8146 |
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It was first published in England in 1851 under the title "The Whale" |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
GREAT AMERICAN NOVELS |
2015-05-27 |
#7078 |
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"The Pequod Meets the Rose-bud" |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
A CHAPTER IN THE NOVEL |
2014-07-16 |
#6883 |
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"'OK, Ishmael, scrunch down so the whole Pequod crew is in the painting! Talk about a catch of the day!"' |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
HAPPIER REWRITTEN NOVEL ENDINGS |
2013-01-16 |
#6523 |
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"It was the... Rachel, that in her search after her missing children, only found another orphan" |
Moby-Dick
DD
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$2,000 |
DJ |
THE NOVEL'S LAST LINE |
2010-06-01 |
#5932 |
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This title character of an 1851 work doesn't show up until Chapter 133 |
Moby-Dick
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FJ |
NOVELS |
2008-09-24 |
#5528 |
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It was partly inspired by Owen Chase's narrative of the shipwreck of the whale-ship Essex |
Moby-Dick
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FJ |
NOVELS |
2007-02-08 |
#5164 |
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In this novel, Ishmael's roommate aboard the Pequod is a Polynesian prince named Queequeg |
Moby-Dick
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$400 |
DJ |
NOVELS |
2003-12-22 |
#4441 |
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"A whale ship was my Yale College and my Harvard" |
Moby-Dick
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$200 |
J |
NOVEL QUOTES |
2002-04-22 |
#4071 |
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"And this is what ye have shipped for, men! To chase that white whale on both sides of land" |
Moby-Dick
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$100 |
J |
NAME THE NOVEL |
1999-07-15 |
#3439 |
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Chapter 32 of this novel is titled "Cetology" |
Moby-Dick
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FJ |
FAMOUS NOVELS |
1994-01-06 |
#2154 |
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The narrative in this 1851 novel contains a dissertation on cetology |
Moby-Dick
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FJ |
AMERICAN NOVELS |
1991-12-18 |
#1683 |