'Moby-Dick' has a remarkable way of resonating with whatever is going on in the world at that particular moment.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think people have the wrong idea of 'Moby Dick' as this somber, boring thing.
Reading 'Moby-Dick' was really a sort of transformative literary experience for me.
Reading 'Moby-Dick' helps you discover how to live.
The thing about Moby Dick is that, at heart, it's a very simple plot - there's only one white whale in the ocean. When you're a boy growing up in a hostile home, you imagine it's unique: it's happening only to you.
Instead of being a page-turner, 'Moby-Dick' is a repository of American history and culture and the essentials of Western literature. The book is so encyclopedic that space aliens could use it to re-create the whale fishery as it once existed on the planet Earth in the midst of the 19th century.
Besides all those whaling details, Moby Dick is about someone who's looking for something so huge, something they've wanted all their life, yet they know when they find it, it will kill them.
The United States is the ultimate land of optimistic promise, but it also gave birth to quintessentially pessimistic tragedy: 'Moby-Dick.'
If you live on Nantucket, you can't avoid its history, and 'Moby Dick' is the way most of us get into Nantucket's history.
I hated the fact that I had to read 'Moby-Dick' as a senior in high school.
Even though I hadn't read a word of it, I grew up hating 'Moby-Dick.'