Description: THAT LONELY GAME: MELVILLE, MARDI, AND THE ALMANAC By Maxine Moore, With a Foreword by Hennig Cohen, University of Columbia Press, 1975 1st Ed. Hardcover with Dust Jacket b&w Illustrations, Frontispiece Condition: Like New xxv, 281 pages, 10.25"9"1.25" Sage green cloth boards with bright gilt titling on spine and Egyptian Astrology design on cover. Binding is solid and tight, covers are clean, corners are sharp. Pages are tight, clean and unmarked with a black top edge. Dust jacket is unclipped and in a removable mylar protector. An exceptional copy. Please see photos for Contents pages and described condition. Quickly and carefully shipped with USPS Media Mail. Also available for free local pickup in Los Angeles 90034. Combined shipping discount is applied to additional purchases from my listings. Add items to your cart first and then checkout. Contact me with any questions. "Irked by the derogatory reaction of British critics who doubted that such books as Typee and Omoo could have been written by a common American sailor, Melville created Mardi -- on the surface, the record of an odyssey through imagined South Sea world. For the first time, Moore unravels the puzzle Melville created in Mardi, designed to dupe his elitist British readers, by exploring Melville's knowledge of astronomy, nautical navigation, astrology, and game theories. Hennig Cohen's foreword defends the traditional approach to reading Mardi and argues that Moore's heretical interpretation is interesting but narrow in scope. Moore then invites the reader to 'play Mardi'--to engage in games of wit, elaborate metaphor, and arcane learning-- to reveal the full meaning of the novel. The game may be plated most successfully by using the astronomy and astrology of Melville's time, but a knowledge of the Tarot and Ganjifa cards and of the usual Western decks of playing cards will add depth to your understanding. Mardi fulfills Melville's calim to originality and stands unique as a masterpiece of synthesis. Moore demonstrates a circular pattern in which metaphors intertwine and shows how Melville's use of The American Alamanac and his metaphor of time provides unity. She theorizes that Melville was a highly concious artist, capable of manipulating intricate strands of imagery, metaphor, and symbol through a detailed and precise method. Moreover, an elaborate system of puns gives his work an unsuspected economy even where it seems excessively and unnecessarily wordy. Though Mardi fails, perhaps from tediousness and overmanipulation, Melville followed through with the artistic implications in his later and greater books. Moore feels he had a highly developed concept of the errant or deceitful narrator and hoped to force his readers into an intense riddle-solving approach to Mardi."
Price: 14.6 USD
Location: Los Angeles, California
End Time: 2024-11-17T03:51:33.000Z
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Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Publication Name: University of Missouri Press
Book Title: That Lonely Game : Melville, "Mardi", and the Almanac
Original Language: English
Item Length: 9 in
Vintage: Yes
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Item Height: 10.25 in
ISBN-10: 082620175X
Features: Dust Jacket, Illustrated
Topic: Melville, Metaphysics, Astrology, Tarot
Item Width: 1.25 in
Ex Libris: No
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Inscribed: No
Edition: First Edition
Publication Year: 1975
Type: Hardcover
Illustrator: Various
Era: 1970s
Author: Maxine Moore
Genre: Literary Criticism
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Item Weight: 2.62 lbs.
Number of Pages: 312 Pages