Book review: “Bartleby, the Scrivener”

Book review: “Bartleby, the Scrivener”

The language is Dickens, the humanity is Melville…

 

 

“Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street”

 

A short story by Herman Melville (1819-1891)

First published 1853 in Putnam’s Magazine, and later in Melville’s The Piazza Tales in 1856

 

If you can read “Bartleby” without suspecting, nay, without more or less believing that it was written by Dickens, you can take pride in your mental discipline whilst reading. I wanted to read it again, and I confess that I briefly searched for “Bartleby” in my rumpled collection of Dickens, which of course does not include The Piazza Tales.

None of Melville’s notorious South Sea elements here. This is straightforward, 19th century prose set in 19th century Wall Street with shabby, luridly eccentric antebellum characters including the narrator and his bedeviled scrivener (copyist), Bartleby.

The circumstances of this desiccated short story are curious, even eccentric, incredulous. The withered and aloof Bartleby is presented, examined and disdained, until his very dispirited isolation makes him the object of the narrator’s genuine but increasingly troubled caretaking.

Bartleby’s enervating and apparently desperate ennui keeps him always a step removed from the narrator’s efforts to supply a little humanity in his life.

The scrivener is lonely beyond understanding. He bears almost in silence the emotional poverty that ultimately kills him.

The reader understands that Bartleby longed, in vain, to be able to repel the Reaper with his simple and inscrutable refrain: “I would prefer not to.”

Despite all temptation, I will prefer not to re-read Melville’s tale on a dreary afternoon.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2019 All rights reserved.

 

Book review: To Serve Them All My Days

by R. F. Delderfield

A beloved teacher,

      you know this story…

click here

Above all: Poems of dawn and more with 73 free verse poems,
and the rest of my poetry books are for sale on Amazon (paperback and Kindle)
and free in Kindle Unlimited, search Amazon for “Richard Carl Subber”

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Book review: The Blithedale Romance

Book review: The Blithedale Romance

the characters walk and talk, but…

 

 

Book review:

The Blithedale Romance

 

by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)

Cambridge, MA: The Riverside Press, 1883

 

 

The Blithedale Romance is Hawthorne’s third novel, an exemplar of Romantic Era fiction that has been called his “darkest” novel. It’s respected by modern critics.

It’s not a page turner. Hawthorne has what it takes to make sure that the characters are independently brought to life, but their relationships are not credible. Even a diligent and interested reader can feel that the love of Zenobia and Priscilla for Hollingsworth is downright mysterious and despairingly inarticulate. They love him, in two marvelously different styles, but Hawthorne never gets around to really decently explaining why they love him.

The other principal characters—Miles Coverdale (a somewhat autobiographical avatar of Hawthorne himself), Old Moodie, and Westervelt—are satisfactorily developed. Nevertheless, the plotlines are mechanical and chronological rather than explanatory.

In The Blithedale Romance, the characters walk and talk, and they interact with each other, but credible understanding of their relationships never really blooms.

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2019 All rights reserved.

Book review: Lafayette by Harlow Unger

He was a great man. Also rich and lucky.

click here

Above all: Poems of dawn and more with 73 free verse poems,
and the rest of my poetry books are for sale on Amazon (paperback and Kindle)
and free in Kindle Unlimited, search Amazon for “Richard Carl Subber”

*   *   *   *   *   *

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