Confidence-Man: His Masquerade

Confidence-Man: His Masquerade

by Herman Melville

19 chapters10h 55mEnglish1857

About this book

The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade was the last major novel by Herman Melville, the American writer and author of Moby-Dick. Published on April 1, 1857 (presumably the exact day of the novel's setting), The Confidence-Man was Melville's tenth major work in eleven years. The novel portrays a Canterbury Tales-style group of steamboat passengers whose interlocking stories are told as they travel down the Mississippi River toward New Orleans. The novel is written as cultural satire, allegory, and metaphysical treatise, dealing with themes of sincerity, identity, morality, religiosity, economic materialism, irony, and cynicism. Many critics have placed The Confidence-Man alongside Melville's Moby-Dick and "Bartleby the Scrivener" as a precursor to 20th-century literary preoccupations with nihilism, existentialism, and absurdism. (Introduction by Wikipedia)

Chapters (19)

1Chapters 1 and 2
1008
2Chapters 3 and 4
2319
3Chapters 5 and 6
1750
4Chapters 7 and 8
1795
5Chapters 9 and 10
1546
6Chapters 11 and 12
881
7Chapters 13 and 14
1255
8Chapters 15 and 16
2034
9Chapters 17 and 18
1370
10Chapters 19 and 20
1985
11Chapters 21 and 22
3897
12Chapters 23 and 24
1675
13Chapters 25 - 28
3345
14Chapters 29 and 30
3131
15Chapters 31 - 36
2398
16Chapters 37 - 39
1548
17Chapters 40 - 41
2732
18Chapters 42 and 43
2196
19Chapters 44 and 45
2493

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