Typee
The 1846 South Seas Classic, with Foreword
-
- US$3.99
출판사 설명
In 1842 a young Herman Melville jumped ship from the whaler Acushnet in the Marquesas Islands and made his way into the valley of the Typee, a people with a fearsome reputation among sailors. Typee, his first book, turns those weeks into one of the great adventure narratives of the South Seas — and the book that made him famous almost overnight.
The narrator, Tommo, flees inland with his friend Toby and is taken in by the Typee: fed, healed, given the beautiful Fayaway for a companion, and set down in what looks like an Eden of ease and plenty. But the paradise slowly turns uncertain. The kindness never stops, and neither does the watching, and Tommo cannot tell whether he is an honoured guest or a prisoner being kept — until the oldest sailor's dread of those islands begins to close in around him.
Braided through the adventure is something sharper: a first-hand report on how the Typee actually live, and a frank, unsparing attack on the missionaries and traders who were remaking the Pacific. Melville admires these people and fears them, defends them and cannot quite see them — and the book's refusal to resolve that tension is part of what keeps it honest, and worth reading critically today.
Written before Moby-Dick, Typee is Melville at his most immediate and charming, with all his later obsessions — the sea, the alien shore, the limits of what one mind can ever know of another — already stirring beneath the surface.