adventurous challenging dark tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
adventurous challenging dark funny informative reflective tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
adventurous challenging informative reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

It was a good book and I'm very glad to have actually taken on reading it in full, despite very polarized opinions of this classic. I found it enjoyable, but the pacing and certain chapters didn't seem to fit in fully with the rest of the book. I will admit, it was a bit tedious at points. But I still really enjoyed reading it and I know it changed me. It's almost a 4-star read for me, and I understand why it is so loved by so many (and disliked by others,) but it falls short in just a few too many ways for me to rate it full 4-stars.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

A titanic novel and perhaps the great American read.

Primero que todo, llego a releer esta gran obra con el entusiasmo de comprender a fondo todo el contenido que abarca, más allá de la historia de un hombre consumido por la venganza.

“Moby Dick”, en su tiempo, jamás fue reconocida como una gran obra. En parte, esto se debió a que el público no logró simpatizar con la extensa longitud de sus páginas, sumada a la detallada y prolongada introducción sobre los cachalotes y los cetáceos, que genera desazón. Incluso hoy, esta característica sigue siendo un punto de discordia entre los nuevos lectores. Sin embargo, en las profundidades de la novela se encuentra mucho más que la simple historia de una ballena blanca que destroza navíos y despierta el temor de los marineros. Reducir la novela a eso es no reconocer el trasfondo por el cual Melville sacrificó años de su vida.

El Pequod es un barco maltrecho que surca los mares con una numerosa tripulación compuesta por marineros de todos los rincones del mundo, cada uno con un propósito propio. En este sentido, podemos identificar que cada personaje persigue su propia búsqueda. Así como Ahab busca venganza, Starbuck anhela el reconocimiento, y Perth lucha por mantener a su familia. De este modo, el Pequod se presenta como una representación de la humanidad, vagando a ciegas por un océano tan vasto como la vida misma, en busca de aquello que consideran inmenso y significativo.

Por lo tanto, se puede interpretar que la novela es una exploración hacia lo divino. Quizás sea por esto que Melville carga su narrativa con abundantes referencias cristianas, como la historia de Jonás, enfrentando lo más siniestro, representado por Ahab, en una batalla imposible. Tal vez sea el propio autor quien busca a Dios mientras escribe esta obra monumental, una idea que él mismo justifica al afirmar: “Para escribir algo grande, se debe escribir sobre algo grande”.

Por otro lado, la locura conduce a la venganza, y esta, inevitablemente, a la muerte. Es un desenlace inminente que, sin embargo, podría haber tomado un rumbo diferente. Pero el hombre cegado por su obsesión sólo puede ver un único sendero, uno que lo lleva irremediablemente hacia la fatalidad. Una poderosa metáfora de nuestra propia condición humana.

Finalmente, quiero decir que este libro no es para todos, ya que requiere una dedicación significativa para digerir todo lo que ofrece. Pero para quienes se atrevan, promete dejar un impacto duradero. En lo personal, considero que es el clásico definitivo.

"I try all things, I achieve what I can."

Moby Dick's reading experience was incredible - it is long and dull and exciting and boring and adventurous and loooong!
I now know so much about sperm whales, the people and the ships who used to hunt them.

By God, Melville! At times you feel like reading a biology book, sometimes you're just lost at sea with no idea on why you're there... There are so many genres in this book, so many allusions to other writers, myths and so on. Genius! One of a kind!
I love the fact I undertook this endeavor but so glad it also ended. I understand why it was a failure when it was written and I can see why it became a classic with such a cult - Call me Ishmael!

The main theme will always be "Man, of limited knowledge and meager powers, lives and dies struggling against forces that he can neither understand nor conquer."

I know this is a classic, and at the time it was written, the history of ships and whaling, and the biology of whales was likely unknown to the readers, but wow does it make for a long and boring story. I ended up listening to it because I fell asleep when actually reading it. But, it’s a classic, so I’ll bump it up a star
adventurous tense slow-paced

I feel like I need a book trophy. What a tome! So first---the prose and writing in this book is phenomenal. I see why it's stood the test of time. The percentage of the book that was actual STORY was very immersive. Adventure story prototype, 100%. 

HOWEVER, all the WHALE BIOLOGY. I felt like Bubba Gump in Forrest Gump. Shrimp salad, shrimp shish kabob, boiled shrimp, broiled shrimp, fried shrimp, and on and on and ON. Whale anatomy, whale skinning, whale beheading, whale EYES, whale whale whale whale. It was just such an odd technical juxtaposition to the rest of the book and bored me to tears. 

Overall, I enjoyed Ahab's obsession, Ishmael's narration, and the overall story arch (though I did find the ending abrupt). 
adventurous inspiring mysterious reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

"¡Muerte a Moby Dick! ¡Que Dios nos persiga si no perseguimos a Moby Dick hasta conseguir su muerte!".