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Lucchesi and the whale

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115 pages
~1h 55min to read
Published 2001 Duke University Press 1 views
ISBN
082232654X
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Description

"Thomas Lucchesi Jr. is a college professor in the American heartland whose obsessions and compulsions include traveling to visit friends in their last moments of life - because grief alone inspires him to write - and searching for secret meaning in Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. Himself a writer of "stories full of violence in a poetic style," Lucchesi tells his students that he teaches "only because [his] fiction is commercially untouchable" and to "never forget that." Austerely isolated, anxiety-ridden, and relentlessly self-involved, Lucchesi nonetheless cannot completely squelch his eagerness for love.". "Having become "a mad Ahab of reading," who is driven to dissect the "artificial body of Melville's behemothian book" to grasp its truth, Lucchesi allows his thoughts to wander and loop from theory to dream to reality to questionable memory. But his black humor-tinged musings are often as profoundly moving as they are intellectual, such as the section in which he describes a chance meeting with a similarly-named mafia don or another in which he ponders the life and philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein in relation to the significance of a name - and then attempts to share these thoughts with a sexy, middle-aged flight attendant.". "Despite apparent spiritual emptiness, Lucchesi in the end does find "a secret meaning" to Moby-Dick. Lentricchia's creations reveal this meaning through a series of self-reflective metaphors, in much the way that Melville himself did in and through Moby-Dick."--BOOK JACKET.

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