What
Happened When I Tried to Write a Book as Fast as Melville Wrote WHITE-JACKET
On a
train out of Strasbourg for Luxembourg I plotted on a manila envelope what I
would do when I got home to Wilmington, DE. I had promised to write a book on
BILLY BUDD by September and had worked on the Northwestern-Newberry MOBY-DICK
instead. I knew Melville had written WHITE-JACKET in 2 months, maximum, and
wondered if later on he remembered much about it. I decided as an experiment
that I would write the BB book in what time I had in July and all of August.
But I had to go to New Orleans first, and there I found a great cache of
letters from Oakey Hall, in one of which he casually announced that Melville
had written WHITE-JACKET in a score of sittings. I took that to mean that
Melville worked for 20 days out of the 2 months--read sources and planned for a
day or two and wrote like hell the third day. Well, the weather did not
cooperate. It got hot and we had no air conditioning. For 19 days in a row [I
am pretty sure it was 19] it was in the mid 90s. People all over the East died.
My computer got gummy.
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