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{{Short description|1847 book by Herman Melville}} {{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}} {{Infobox book | name = Omoo | image = Omoo 1st.jpg | caption = First edition title page | alt = | author = [[Herman Melville]] | illustrator = | cover_artist = | country = United States, England | language = English | subject = | genre = [[Travel literature]] | published = {{Plainlist| * 1847 {{small|(New York: Harper & Brothers)}} * 1847 {{small|(London: John Murray)}} }} | media_type = Print | awards = | isbn = | oclc = | dewey = | congress = | preceded_by = [[Typee]] | followed_by = }} '''''Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas''''' is the second book by American [[writer]] [[Herman Melville]], first published in [[London]] in 1847, and a [[sequel]] to his first [[South Seas]] narrative ''[[Typee]]'', also based on the author's experiences in the [[South Pacific]]. After leaving the [[island]] of [[Nuku Hiva]], the main [[character (arts)|character]] ships aboard a [[whaling]] vessel that makes its way to [[Tahiti]], after which there is a [[mutiny]] and a third of the crew are imprisoned on Tahiti. In 1949, the narrative was adapted into the [[exploitation film]] ''[[Omoo-Omoo, the Shark God]]''. ==Background== The basis for the book are the author's experiences in the South Seas. According to scholars Harrison Hayford and Walter Blair, in August and September 1842, the ''Lucy Ann'', an Australian whaleship, took Melville from the Marquesas Islands to Tahiti. There the crew revolted. After being imprisoned in the native jail, he strolled around the islands for some days, before embarking on another whaler for a voyage of six months.<ref>Hayford and Blair (1969), p. xviii</ref> In the Preface to ''Omoo'', Melville claimed the book was autobiographical, written "from simple recollection" of some of his experiences in the Pacific in the 1840s and strengthened by his retelling the story many times before family and friends. But scholar Charles Roberts Anderson, working in the late 1930s, discovered that Melville had not simply relied on his memory and went on to reveal a wealth of other sources he drew on in writing the book.<ref>{{cite book|last=Anderson|first=Charles Roberts|title=Melville in the South Seas|url=https://archive.org/details/melvilleinsouths0000ande|url-access=registration|year=1939}}</ref> Later, Melville scholar [[Harrison Hayford]] made a detailed study of these sources and, in the introduction to a 1969 edition of ''Omoo'', summed up the author's practice, showing that this was a repetition of a process previously used in ''Typee'': <blockquote>"He had altered facts and dates, elaborated events, assimilated foreign materials, invented episodes, and dramatized the printed experiences of others as his own. He had not plagiarized, merely, for he had always rewritten and nearly always improved the passages he appropriated.....first writing out the narrative based on his recollections and invention, then using source books to pad out the chapters he had already written and to supply the stuff of new chapters that he inserted at various points in the manuscript."<ref>Parker p. 455</ref></blockquote> To a greater extent than he did in ''Typee'', Melville used several source books from which he took passages and rewrote them for his book. The most important of these source books are [[William Ellis (British missionary)|William Ellis]], ''Polynesian Researches'' from 1833, [[Georg von Langsdorff|George H. von Langsdorff]], ''Voyages and Travels in Various Parts of the World'' from 1813, Charles S. Stewart, ''A Visit to the South Seas in the U.S. ship Vincennes'' from 1831, and [[Charles Wilkes]], ''Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition'' of 1845.<ref>Tanselle (1982), 1327 and 1329-30</ref> ==Plot== In 1842, the narrator, having just escaped an "indulgent captivity" among the natives of [[Nuku Hiva]], joins the crew of an Australian whaling ship from [[Sydney]]. He does not give his name, but one crew member calls him "Typee". Soon after coming aboard he meets and forms a friendship with the vessel's surgeon, a tall thin man known to his crew-mates as "Dr Long Ghost". == Writing style == Compared to ''Typee'', in ''Omoo'' a new style was emerging,<ref>Delbanco (2005), p. 117</ref> of a "distinct and original signature," as critic Warner Berthoff describes it.<ref>Quoted in Delbanco (2005), p. 117</ref> Biographer Hershel Parker finds the narrator "powerfully attractive," because through the comical nature of the events "a new sensibility was emerging."<ref>Parker (1996), p. 454</ref> Melville's "new command of language," as Parker calls this development, came with hints of what would be characteristic of his mature style in ''Moby-Dick'' and later books.<ref>Parker (1996), p. 454.</ref> These include the merging of images from various historical times and places. Essentially, an example of this can be found in chapter 27 of ''Omoo'', where the narrator sees on a ship in the harbor of Tahiti the name of a town along the Hudson river: "In an instant, palm-trees and elms--canoes and skiffs--church spires and bamboos--all mingled in one vision of the present and the past."<ref>Quoted in Parker (1996), p. 454.</ref> Another emerging characteristic was the influence of [[Bible|Scripture]] on Melville's writing. A few examples suffice to illustrate this point: in chapter 2, the mate "abhorred all weak infusions, and cleaved manfully to strong drink" echoes [[Epistle to the Romans|Romans]] 12:9; "Woe be unto" him in chapter 14 repeats a biblical expression found in several places, for instance in [[Jeremiah]] 23:1; the character Kooloo in chapter 40 is "as sounding brass and a tinkling cynbal," which Melville took from [[First Epistle to the Corinthians|1 Corinthians]] 13:1.<ref>Parker (1996), p. 454-455</ref> ==Publication history== On December 18, 1846, Melville signed a contract with [[Harper Brothers]] for the publication of ''Omoo'', and on December 30, he offered the book to [[John Murray (publishing house)|John Murray]], the British publisher of ''Typee''.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 329</ref> Some day in January publisher Evert Duyckinck asked Melville for permission to publish some pages of ''Omoo'' in the new magazine ''Literary World'', and on January 30 the title was registered in the Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 330</ref> On February 1 proof sheets of the American edition were sent to London, where the customs house in Liverpool initially seized them as a piracy.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 331</ref> The sheets were released and on February 26 Murray proposed to pay Β£150 for the copyright of the book,<ref>Roper (1968), p. 332</ref> Β£50 more than he had offered for the previous book<ref>Roper (1968), p. 333</ref> Melville accepted this offer in a letter of March 31, explaining that "he did not know how to determine the 'precise pecuniary value' of an unpublished work."<ref>Roper (1968), p. 332</ref> March 27 was the official date of the British publication. 4,000 copies of ''Omoo'' were printed, 2,500 paperbound copies in two parts, each priced at half a crown, and the rest as a single hardbound volume, priced at six shillings. At the request of the author, a map was engraved, as well as a Round-Robin diagram.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 333</ref> Murray included both ''Typee'' and ''Omoo'' in his ''[[Home and Colonial Library]]'' which was marketed and sold as a collection throughout the British Empire. In it, Melville was listed together with other well-known writers, an event that turned out to be an important watershed for both his sales and reputation. "Over the decades Melville's presence in the library insured the fame of his first two books with two or three generations of English readers all around the world."<ref>Parker p. 510.</ref> In the United States, the book was available on May 1, in the same formats as Murray issued them. The two paperbound volumes were priced at 50Β’ each, and the single volume in a cloth casing cost $1.25. 5,500 copies were printed by July, 2,000 of which in paper, 1,800 in [[muslin]], and the rest remained in sheets.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 334</ref> Variants in spelling and punctuation aside, the two editions differed at 79 points, most of which were single words.<ref>Roper (1968), p. 334</ref> ==Notes== {{reflist}} ==References== * {{cite book | last = Delbanco | first = Andrew | year = 2005 | title = Melville, His World and Work | publisher = Knopf | place = New York | isbn = 978-0-375-40314-9 | oclc = 845847813 | author-link = Andrew Delbanco | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/melvillehisworld00delb }} * [[Harrison Hayford|Hayford, Harrison]], and Walter Blair (1969). "Introduction" and "Explanatory Notes." In: Herman Melville, ''Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas.'' Edited by Harrison Hayford and alter Blair. New York: Hendricks House, Inc. * {{cite book|last=Parker|first=Hershel|title=Herman Melville: A Biography (Volume 1, 1819β1851)|year=1996|publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press|location=Baltimore, Md.|isbn=0-8018-5428-8|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/hermanmelville00hers}} * [[Gordon Roper|Roper, Gordon]] (1968). "Historical Note." In: Herman Melville, ''Omoo. A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas.'' The Writings of Herman Melville. The Northwestern-Newberry Edition Volume Two. Edited by Harrison Hayford, Hershel Parker, G. Thomas Tanselle. Evanston and Chicago: [[Northwestern University Press]] and The [[Newberry Library]] * [[G. Thomas Tanselle|Tanselle, G. Thomas]] (1982). 'Notes.' In: Herman Melville, ''Typee, Omoo, Mardi.'' The Library of America, Vol. 1. {{ISBN|0940450003}} ==External links== {{wikisource|Omoo|''Omoo''}} {{Gutenberg|no=4045|name=Omoo}} * {{librivox book | title=Omoo | author=Herman Melville}} * [http://www.riapress.com/riapress/product.lasso?productid=10 Free typeset PDF ebook of ''Omoo'' and other Melville novels optimized for printing, plus extensive Melville reading list] {{Herman Melville}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:1847 American novels]] [[Category:Novels by Herman Melville]] [[Category:Novels set in Tahiti]] [[Category:Novels republished in the Library of America]] [[Category:American novels adapted into films]] [[Category:Novels set in Oceania]] [[Category:Books about whaling]] [[Category:Nautical novels]] [[Category:Novels set in the 19th century]]
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