Israel Potter - His Fifty Years of Exile By Herman Melville. Classic Herman Melville. Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile (1855) is the eighth novel by American writer Herman Melville, and his first serialized one, in installments in Putnam's Monthly Magazine from July 1854 through March 1855, in book form by George Palmer Putnam in New York in March 1855, and in a pirated edition by George Routledge in London in May 1855. It is loosely based on a pamphlet (108-page) autobiography that Melville acquired in the 1840s, Life and Remarkable Adventures of Israel R. Potter (Providence, Rhode Island, 1824). At about 60,000 words, the novel is much shorter than the major novels but significantly longer than two of Melville's greatest stories, "Bartleby, the Scrivener" and "Benito Cereno," which were written during the same period and included the following year in The Piazza Tales. It followed the disastrous critical and commercial failure of his previous novel, Pierre: or, The Ambiguities. Melville disliked the finished work, and claimed that he wrote it as quickly as possible for the money. Marred by a passive, colorless and astonishingly unlucky hero and a depressingly anti-climactic ending, this novel of the American Revolution was nevertheless a total commercial failure. In recent years, however, many critics have attempted to argue that the novel shows Melville comfortable in his narrative powers and indulging his considerable talents for humor, sly characterization, episodic action, and unsettling understatement. It is one of his easiest books to read, which is all the more surprising in that it was followed by perhaps his most difficult prose work, The Confidence-Man, in 1857.
Sobre o autor(a)
Melville, Herman
HERMAN MELVILLE, nascido em Nova York em 1819 e falecido na mesma cidade em 1891, foi um escritor norte-americano que, apesar de incompreendido em sua época, é hoje considerado um dos maiores escritores de língua inglesa. De família humilde, Melville teve uma vida de aventuras, trabalhando em diversos empregos, incluindo marujo em um navio mercante e baleeiro. Suas experiências de viagem, especialmente no Pacífico, serviram de inspiração para seus livros, como "Typee" e "Omoo". Embora seu romance mais ambicioso, "Moby Dick", não tenha recebido grande destaque em sua época, ele é agora considerado uma obra-prima da literatura. Após anos de esquecimento, a obra de Melville começou a ser redescoberta e valorizada a partir de 1920. |
| ISBN | 9781484885505 |
| Autor(a) | Melville, Herman |
| Editora | Createspace |
| Ano de edição | 2013 |
| Páginas | 162 |
| Acabamento | Brochura |
| Dimensões | 24,60 X 18,90 |