Moby Dick in your inbox
25 Nov 2022 10:20 pmAnother project by the folks who brought you Dracula Daily — this time it's Herman Melville's Moby Dick, sent in short excerpts to your inbox over a period of two years.
I just subscribed to Whale Weekly https://whaleweekly.substack.com/?utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=pss
(recycled from a comment elsenet) I love Moby Dick so much. I read it for the first time via audiobook, and the narrator, Adams Morgan, was wonderful, that was an excellent way to take it in. (Unfortunately it appears that narration is no longer available.)
Moby Dick is so modern compared to other dead white dude novels. It's got diverse characters and canon M/M and it's full of nerdy infodumps and there's even a bit of a play thrown in. And if you ask me why I think Moby Dick counts as a science fiction book you'll get an earful (I mean, it is essentially about spaceships and dragons, or at least their marine equivalents).
[edited to add] In the comments,
fauxklore mentioned the New Bedford Whaling Museum annual Moby Dick reading marathon. You can attend in person or listen to the livestream. https://www.whalingmuseum.org/program/moby-dick-marathon-2023/
I just subscribed to Whale Weekly https://whaleweekly.substack.com/?utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=pss
(recycled from a comment elsenet) I love Moby Dick so much. I read it for the first time via audiobook, and the narrator, Adams Morgan, was wonderful, that was an excellent way to take it in. (Unfortunately it appears that narration is no longer available.)
Moby Dick is so modern compared to other dead white dude novels. It's got diverse characters and canon M/M and it's full of nerdy infodumps and there's even a bit of a play thrown in. And if you ask me why I think Moby Dick counts as a science fiction book you'll get an earful (I mean, it is essentially about spaceships and dragons, or at least their marine equivalents).
[edited to add] In the comments,
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