[Typee by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link book
Typee

INTRODUCTION TO THE EDITION OF 1892
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About the same time the whole stock of the author's books was destroyed by fire, keeping them out of print at a critical moment; and public interest, which until then had been on the increase, gradually began to diminish.
After this Mr.Melville contributed several short stories to Putnam's Monthly and Harper's Magazine.

Those in the former periodical were collected in a volume as Piazza Tales (1856); and of these 'Benito Cereno' and 'The Bell Tower' are equal to his best previous efforts.
'Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile' (1855), first printed as a serial in Putnam's, is an historical romance of the American Revolution, based on the hero's own account of his adventures, as given in a little volume picked up by Mr.Melville at a book-stall.

The story is well told, but the book is hardly worthy of the author of 'Typee.' 'The Confidence Man' (1857), his last serious effort in prose fiction, does not seem to require criticism.
Mr.Melville's pen had rested for nearly ten years, when it was again taken up to celebrate the events of the Civil War.

'Battle Pieces and Aspects of the War' appeared in 1866.

Most of these poems originated, according to the author, in an impulse imparted by the fall of Richmond; but they have as subjects all the chief incidents of the struggle.


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