Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/006676639/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Herman Melville's towering achievement stands as a timeless monument to the richness and diversity of nineteenth-century American literature. Employing a singularly American idiom, his immortal masterpiece, Moby-Dick, broke the bounds of the novel as it was then known and understood. But Melville's place in the pantheon of American literature is all the more exceptional given the fact that he remained virtually unknown as a writer throughout the course of his lifetime. It wasn't until the 1920s, some thirty years after his death, that he gained his reputation when that era's most influential literary critics promulgated his genius. Drawing upon more than five hundred newly discovered family letters, Laurie Robertson-Lorant now provides a richly fascinating and altogether fresh perspective on this titan of American literature. With energetic prose, Robertson-Lorant immerses the reader in the political and social climate of the often turbulent world of Herman Melville, from his childhood to his adventurous seafaring days, to his intermittently successful but never fulfilling career as a writer. With breathtaking scope and an unerring eye for psychological nuance, Robertson-Lorant pinpoints the forces that would shape the man: the women and children in Melville's life, his complicated and enigmatic relationship with Nathaniel Hawthorne, the psychosexual tensions that informed his art, his struggles against debt, his disappointment about failing to win a popular audience for his more serious work, and the alcoholism and violence that plagued his family. Melville is a major, lively, brilliantly researched account of a true giant and one of America's greatest literary geniuses.".
- catalog contributor b9283198.
- catalog created "c1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "c1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1996.".
- catalog description "Herman Melville's towering achievement stands as a timeless monument to the richness and diversity of nineteenth-century American literature. Employing a singularly American idiom, his immortal masterpiece, Moby-Dick, broke the bounds of the novel as it was then known and understood. But Melville's place in the pantheon of American literature is all the more exceptional given the fact that he remained virtually unknown as a writer throughout the course of his lifetime. It wasn't until the 1920s, some thirty years after his death, that he gained his reputation when that era's most influential literary critics promulgated his genius. Drawing upon more than five hundred newly discovered family letters, Laurie Robertson-Lorant now provides a richly fascinating and altogether fresh perspective on this titan of American literature.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [675]-683) and index.".
- catalog description "Lofty origins -- Snug in investments -- Elegant negligence -- Tormented with an itch for things remote -- A naturally roving disposition -- The wild, the watery, the unshored -- The floodgates of the wonder-world -- A little experience in the art of book-craft -- Fierce cannibal delight -- Creating the creative -- The man who lived among the cannibals -- The prince of whales -- The ardent Virginian -- A sort of sea-feeling in the country -- One grand hooded phantom -- King of the cannibals -- Counter-friction to the machine -- Shadows foreshadowing deeper shadows -- What sort of bamboozling story is this? -- Childe Herman's pilgrimage -- A convulsed and half-dissolved society -- Fierce battles and civil strife -- A tie rich in catastrophes -- A survivor of the Civil War -- A time when peace had horrors of its own -- Agonies that operate unseen -- Devilish tantalization of the gods -- Confronting sphinx and angel -- The hellish Society of Men -- The rose farmer in the garden of truant Eve.".
- catalog description "With energetic prose, Robertson-Lorant immerses the reader in the political and social climate of the often turbulent world of Herman Melville, from his childhood to his adventurous seafaring days, to his intermittently successful but never fulfilling career as a writer. With breathtaking scope and an unerring eye for psychological nuance, Robertson-Lorant pinpoints the forces that would shape the man: the women and children in Melville's life, his complicated and enigmatic relationship with Nathaniel Hawthorne, the psychosexual tensions that informed his art, his struggles against debt, his disappointment about failing to win a popular audience for his more serious work, and the alcoholism and violence that plagued his family. Melville is a major, lively, brilliantly researched account of a true giant and one of America's greatest literary geniuses.".
- catalog extent "xxv, 710 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Melville.".
- catalog identifier "0517593149".
- catalog isFormatOf "Melville.".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "c1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers,".
- catalog relation "Melville.".
- catalog subject "813/.3 B 20".
- catalog subject "Melville, Herman, 1819-1891 Biography.".
- catalog subject "Melville, Herman, 1819-1891.".
- catalog subject "Novelists, American 19th century Biography.".
- catalog subject "PS2386 .R635 1995".
- catalog subject "PS2386 .R635 1996".
- catalog tableOfContents "Lofty origins -- Snug in investments -- Elegant negligence -- Tormented with an itch for things remote -- A naturally roving disposition -- The wild, the watery, the unshored -- The floodgates of the wonder-world -- A little experience in the art of book-craft -- Fierce cannibal delight -- Creating the creative -- The man who lived among the cannibals -- The prince of whales -- The ardent Virginian -- A sort of sea-feeling in the country -- One grand hooded phantom -- King of the cannibals -- Counter-friction to the machine -- Shadows foreshadowing deeper shadows -- What sort of bamboozling story is this? -- Childe Herman's pilgrimage -- A convulsed and half-dissolved society -- Fierce battles and civil strife -- A tie rich in catastrophes -- A survivor of the Civil War -- A time when peace had horrors of its own -- Agonies that operate unseen -- Devilish tantalization of the gods -- Confronting sphinx and angel -- The hellish Society of Men -- The rose farmer in the garden of truant Eve.".
- catalog title "Melville : a biography / Laurie Robertson-Lorant.".
- catalog type "Biography. fast".
- catalog type "text".