Billy Budd, Sailor

Billy Budd, Sailor

About the Book

Herman Melville's final masterpiece, found unpublished on his desk at his death.

Billy Budd, Sailor would emerge, after its publication in 1924, as one of Melville's best-loved books--and one of his most open, with its discussion of homosexualty.

In it, Melville returns to the sea to tell the story of Billy, a cheerful, hard working, and handsome young sailor, conscripted to work against his will on another ship, where he soon finds himself persecuted by Claggart, the paranoid master-at-arms. As things escalate beyond the naive Billy's control, tragedy looms on the horizon like Melville's great white whale, and the story become Melville's final, sublime plunge into the classic tussle between civilization and chaos, between oppression and freedom, as well as the book in which he discusses homosexuality most openly.

One of the major works of American literature.
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Praise for Billy Budd, Sailor

"The most studied and admired of Melville's works except for Moby-Dick." --John Updike

"[A] late-life masterpiece." --The New York Review of Books
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The Art of the Novella Series

At the Bay
Billy Budd, Sailor
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Oroonoko
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The Invisible Man
Carmen
The Haunted Bookshop
The Poor Clare
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
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About the Author

Herman Melville
Herman Melville was born in New York City in 1819. At eighteen he set sail on a whaler, and upon his return, wrote a series of bestselling adventure novels based on his travels, including Typee and Omoo, which made him famous. Starting with Moby-Dick in 1851, however, his increasingly complex and challenging work drew more and more negative criticism, until 1857 when, after his collection Piazza Tales (which included Bartleby the Scrivener), and the novel The Confidence Man, Melville stopped publishing fiction. He drifted into obscurity, writing poetry and working for the Customs House in New York City, until his death in 1891. More by Herman Melville
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