Those of us who have always felt guilty about never being
able to read Herman Melville's
Moby Dick, perhaps the most classic of classic American
novels, from cover to cover and excused that
failure by lamenting its excessive length and those endless digressions on
whales and whaling, now have a wonderful opportunity to remedy that situation.
Check out the Moby Dick Big Read website, and we can now
have the book read to us a chapter a day, each day a different reader some well
known household names, some of lesser note.
Moby Dick Big Read is the brainchild of
artist Angela Cockayne and writer Philip Hoare who were curators of a whale
symposium and exhibition at Peninsula Arts a contemporary art space housed at
Plymouth University. As the website explains, "inspired by their mutual
obsession with Moby Dick and with the overarching subject of the whale, they
invited artists, writers, musicians, scientists and academics to respond to the
theme." A three day symposium, it turns out was not enough to satisfy the
enthusiasm generated, so fast forward to September 16, 2012, and the beginning
of the Big Read project.
Hoare and Cockayne have assembled 135 celebrities from a
variety of fields each to read one chapter of the novel a day for 135 days.
Each episode is available on the website and can be downloaded from there or
subscribed to at iTunes. Chapter one is read by Tilda Swinton, and other
readers up to now include Simon Callow, Stephen Fry, Chad Harbaugh, Mama Tokus,
and Fran King. Length of episode of course depends on the length of the
particular chapter, but each of the readings released to date (22 chapters as
of this writing) is extremely well done and leaves the reader eager for the
next release.
Each chapter is accompanied by a visual contribution by an
artist. These are not necessarily
illustrations of anything in the chapter, but rather interpretive works based
on the artist's imaginative connection with material of the novel. Thus for
example take a look at Matthew Benedict's triptych for "Merry
Christmas," chapter 22, "Moby Dick at Breakfast," Oliver
Clegg's silk screen eye chart, "The
Question is Not What U Look at But What You See" illustrating chapter 7,
"The Chapel, or Boyd Webb's1984 suckling man "Nourishment" which
is attached o the fifth chapter "Breakfast."
For those who have never read the book and for those who
have read it once or even more than onceMoby Dick Big Read
is an opportunity not to be missed. Who knows, with a positive response and a
little luck, what other blockbuster classics--Ulysses (after
all it does get read on Bloomsday), Remembrance of Things
Past (my own bĂȘte noire), War and Peace might
await their own big reads.
I have now listened through chapter 27 and while some of the readers could use some work, most do an excellent job, sometimes with very difficult text.
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