Pierre
or, The Ambiguities
Herman Melville - Author
William Spengemann - Editor/introduction
William Spengemann - Notes by
Summary of Pierre
Summary of Pierre
Reviews for Pierre
An Excerpt from Pierre
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'Ambiguities indeed! One long brain-muddling, soul-bewildering ambiguity (to borrow Mr. Melville's style), like Melchisedeck, without beginning or end-a labyrinth without a clue - an Irish bog without so much as a Jack o'the'lantern to guide the wanderer's footsteps - the dream of a distempered stomach, disordered by a hasty supper on half-cooked pork chops."
So judged the New York Herald when Pierre was first published in 1852, with most contemporary reviewers joining in the general condemnation: 'a dead failure,' 'this crazy rigmarole,' and "a literary mare's nest." Latter-day critics have recognized in the story of Melville's idealistic young hero a corrosive satire of the sentimental-Gothic novel, and a revolutionary foray into modernist literary techniques.
'For anyone who, being aware of the culture of modernity, is curious about its origins, Pierre ranks with Coleridge’s ‘Rime of the Ancient Mariner', Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus, Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter, and the poems of Emily Dickinson as one of the privileged places where the dead past can be seen giving way inexorably to the living present' - William Spengemann in his Introduction
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