An obsession with Herman Melville emerges amid pandemic lockdown.
It’s not immediately clear why the book opens with the narrator’s husband saying to her: “Bon voyage.” She calls it an “edict inside a valediction,” suggesting that these are people who enjoy words and wordplay. And irony. For this is the time of the pandemic. The couple are academics stuck at home with their two daughters, but the narrator has embarked on a research project concerning Herman Melville. A desk-chair traveler, she roams through scholarship, criticism, fans’ notes, and ephemera, presenting facts, coincidences, and insights in mostly short, one-sentence paragraphs that form a kind of enchiridion of Melvilleana, reflecting an obsession with Herman not unlike Ahab’s with Moby. At the same time, the narrator sparingly provides glimpses of her home life and marriage, moments of domestic ease or of uncertainty, hints of past discord, like “the Bad Time.” The narrator’s Hermania should engage book lovers, as she collects and connects facts about Melville and references from his biographers and other writers—E.M. Forster, Walker Percy, William Gaddis, Marilynne Robinson, Lauren Groff et al.—in a way that points up the delights of literary trawling. Elizabeth Hardwick’s short life of Melville and his marriage are tied to Hardwick’s rocky union with Robert Lowell as well as Melville’s intense friendship with Hawthorne. The toll that creativity can take on partnerships is a pervasive theme. The authors themselves are husband and wife. Bachelder was a National Book Award finalist for his 2016 novel, The Throwback Special. Habel won the Iowa Poetry Prize for her 2020 collection, The Book of Jane. Some autobiographical points are evident, but what may be more revealing is the tonal consistency of this collaboration and the sense of creative pleasure that went into making it.
A remarkable, unusually rewarding work.