Audiolibro: Moby Dick
- Download Chapter 000: Etymology and Extracts audio
- Download Chapter 001-002 audio
- Download Chapter 003 audio
- Download Chapter 004-007 audio
- Download Chapter 008-009 audio
- Download Chapter 010-012 audio
- Download Chapter 013-015 audio
- Download Chapter 016 audio
- Download Chapter 017-021 audio
- Download Chapter 022-025 audio
- Download Chapter 026-027 audio
- Download Chapter 028-031 audio
- Download Chapter 032 audio
- Download Chapter 033-035 audio
- Download Chapter 036-040 audio
- Download Chapter 041 audio
- Download Chapter 042-044 audio
- Download Chapter 045-047 audio
- Download Chapter 048-050 audio
- Download Chapter 051-053 audio
- Download Chapter 054 audio
- Download Chapter 055-058 audio
- Download Chapter 059-063 audio
- Download Chapter 064-067 audio
- Download Chapter 068-071 audio
- Download Chapter 072-073 audio
- Download Chapter 074-077 audio
- Download Chapter 078-080 audio
- Download Chapter 081-082 audio
- Download Chapter 083-086 audio
- Download Chapter 087-088 audio
- Download Chapter 089-091 audio
- Download Chapter 092-096 audio
- Download Chapter 097-100 audio
- Download Chapter 101-104 audio
- Download Chapter 105-108 audio
- Download Chapter 109-113 audio
- Download Chapter 114-118 audio
- Download Chapter 119-123 audio
- Download Chapter 124-127 audio
- Download Chapter 128-132 audio
- Download Chapter 133 audio
- Download Chapter 134 audio
- Download Chapter 135 and Epilogue audio
Géneros de audiolibros
Autor
Descripción
“Call me Ishmael” is one of the most famous opening lines in American literature. With these words, opens one of the strangest and most gripping stories ever written about the sea and sea-faring. Moby Dick by Herman Melville is today considered one of the greatest novels written in America but paradoxically, it was a miserable failure when it first made its debut in 1851. Entitled Moby Dick or The Whale the book finally got its due after the author's death and is now regarded as a classic portrayal of mania and fatal obsession.
The narrator, Ishmael, travels to New Bedford, Massachusetts, to find a place on a whaling ship. He lodges at a seedy inn where he is forced to share a room with a strange old character, Queequeg, who was a harpooner. Despite his initial revulsion of Queequeg, Ishmael decides to join him in looking for work together. They reach Nantucket, the traditional center of whaling, where they find a berth on the Pequod, a bizarre vessel adorned with the skeletons and teeth of whales. The captain, Ahab, a mysterious figure, does not appear immediately. Later, they come to know that he is on board, recovering from losing a leg on his last voyage having escaped death narrowly following an encounter with a massive sperm whale.
As the ship sails past Africa, Ahab's sinister motives begin to emerge. His agenda is to hunt and destroy a legendary whale named Moby Dick, whom he has unsuccessfully pursued several times. He has smuggled his own private harpooners on board and he accosts every whaling ship he meets and demands information about sightings of Moby Dick. One of the ships has a maniacal passenger called Gabriel, who claims to be a prophet and he predicts doom for anyone who seeks Moby Dick. The peg leg captain finally encounters Moby Dick and a trail of destruction follows. The obsessed Ahab refuses to give up. The novel then races towards a brilliant and dramatic climax.
As an example of the Great American Novel, Moby Dick is unrivaled in its structure, language and style. Melville amalgamates a fabulous mix of Biblical, Shakespearean and mythical elements along with wonderful seafaring atmosphere sourced from his own nautical experiences on board whaling schooners. Whaling stories from contemporary sources in Nantucket's local grapevine was another rich fountainhead of material.
Moby Dick has been adapted for stage, radio, screen, television, comics and graphic novels. It remains a strange and unforgettable classic which no reader should miss.
¿Te gustó lo que escuchaste? ¡Compártelo con tus amigos y familiares!.