Herman Melville's Israel Potter


Details
To commemorate the 250th Anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill, please join us for a discussion and read through of Herman Melville's Israel Potter. Please read the whole book for this Meetup.
Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile is the eighth book by American writer Herman Melville, first published in serial form in Putnam's Monthly magazine between July 1854 and March 1855, and in book form by G. P. Putnam & Co. in March 1855. A pirated edition was also published in London by George Routledge in May 1855. The book is loosely based on a pamphlet (108-page) autobiography that Melville acquired in the 1840s, Life and Remarkable Adventures of Israel R. Potter (Providence, Rhode Island, 1824).
Based on the life of an actual soldier who claimed to have fought at Bunker Hill, Israel Potter is unique among Herman Melville's books: a novel in the guise of a biography. In telling the story of Israel Potter's fall from Revolutionary War hero to peddler on the streets of London, where he obtained a livelihood by crying "Old Chairs to Mend," Melville alternated between invented scenes and historical episodes, granting cameos to such famous men of the era as Benjamin Franklin (Potter may have been his secret courier) and John Paul Jones, and providing a portrait of the American Revolution as the rollicking adventure and violent series of events that it really was.
Online Text Link:
https://gutenberg.org/cache/epub/15422/pg15422-images.html
Amazon Purchase Link:
https://www.amazon.com/Israel-Potter-Fifty-Penguin-Classics/dp/014310523X


Herman Melville's Israel Potter