Bartleby and Benito Cereno

Dover Thrift Editions

Paperback, 104 pages

English language

Published Dec. 11, 1990 by Dover Publications.

ISBN:
978-0-486-26473-8
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1083420388

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (1 review)

Herman Melville towers among American writers not only for his powerful novels, but also for the stirring novellas and short stories that flowed from his pen. Two of the most admired of these — "Bartleby" and "Benito Cereno" — first appeared as magazine pieces and were then published in 1856 as part of a collection of short stories entitled The Piazza Tales.

"Bartleby" (also known as "Bartleby the Scrivener") is an intriguing moral allegory set in the business world of mid-19th-century New York. A strange, enigmatic man employed as a clerk in a legal office, Bartleby forces his employer to come to grips with the most basic questions of human responsibility, and haunts the latter's conscience, even after Bartleby's dismissal.

"Benito Cereno," considered one of Melville's best short stories, deals with a bloody slave revolt on a Spanish vessel. A splendid parable of man's struggle against the forces of evil, …

4 editions

Subjects

  • Young men -- Fiction.
  • Copyists -- Fiction.
  • New York (N.Y.) -- Fiction.
  • Wall Street (New York, N.Y.) -- Fiction.