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Peninsula Arts
The Moby-Dick Big Read
‘I have written a blasphemous book’, said Melville when his novel was first published in 1851, ‘and I feel as spotless as the lamb’. Deeply subversive, in almost every way imaginable, Moby-Dick is a virtual, alternative bible – and as such, ripe for reinterpretation in this new world of new media. Out of Dominion was born its bastard child – or perhaps its immaculate conception – the Moby-Dick Big Read: an online version of Melville’s magisterial tome: each of its 135 chapters read out aloud, by a mixture of the celebrated and the unknown, to be broadcast online, one new chapter each day,...
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Ratings & Reviews
4.5 stars from 276 ratings
听不了
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Arqiiiii via Apple Podcasts · China · 05/11/15
Mixed bag, but mostly excellent
As one might expect from an audiobook where a different person reads every chapter, some readers do a better than others. A few stumble over some of the words, and I am surprised how many mispronounce forecastle (it's always dangerous to assume an English word is pronounced how it looks). So far...Read full review »
Jim Morton via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 04/10/14
Excellent!
The amount of labor and love put into this is unfathomable, and so far I have greatly enjoyed the reading. The only things that have been bugging me so far are how some readers sound as engaged as a kid getting a rock for his birthday, and that some slosh and smack saliva around very very loudly,...Read full review »
BrettyB8 via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 10/13/13
Recent Episodes
Introduced by Peter Donaldson, Recorded by John Braden, WOMR, Edited and Mixed at dBs Music 'I have written a blasphemous book', said Melville when his novel was first published in 1851, 'and I feel as spotless as the lamb'. Deeply subversive, in almost every way imaginable, Moby-Dick is a...
Published 01/29/13
Published 01/29/13
Introduced by Peter Donaldson, Edited and Mixed at dBs Music 'I have written a blasphemous book', said Melville when his novel was first published in 1851, 'and I feel as spotless as the lamb'. Deeply subversive, in almost every way imaginable, Moby-Dick is a virtual, alternative bible - and as...
Published 01/28/13
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