Author. Born one of eight children in New York City, to Allan and Maria Melvill. He and his brothers attended the New York Male School which was considered a step above a common education. In 1830, the family moved to Albany, New York, where his father went into the fur business, a venture that ended in disaster. Mental collapse and illness lead to his father's early death, leaving the family in poverty. At twelve, he was forced to leave Albany Academy, and take a job as a bank clerk. In 1839, he shipped out as a cabin boy on the whaler "Acushnet." He then apparently lived briefly among the Typee tribe in the Marquesas Islands. In his mid-20s, he returned home and wrote of his journeys. His early novels of South Seas adventures were quite popular, and by age thirty, he had published five books in five years. His sixth book was a departure from his earlier style, however, and "Moby Dick" ran counter to the mood of the times. It sold only about 3,000 copies during his lifetime. In 1847, he married Elisabeth Shaw, daughter of the chief justice of Massachusetts. He and his wife had two sons and two daughters. After unsuccessful lecture tours from 1857 to 1860, he lived in Washington, D.C. for the first two years of the American Civil War. He volunteered for the Navy but was rejected. He moved back to New York in 1863, where he was appointed customs inspector on the New York docks, work that secured him a regular income, necessary with his plummeting popularity as a writer. His literary response to the American Civil War was his 1866 collection of poems, "Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War." In 1876, he published more poetry in "Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land." He also published several short stories in magazines during his career. When he succumbed to heart failure at age 72, a few respectful obituaries were printed, but his fame had passed. His unfinished work, "Billy Budd," remained unpublished until 1924. His career had spanned fewer than 20 full-length books. His letters and papers were collected by his daughter and, eventually, archived at the New York Public Library with his two seafaring trunks. In the late 1940s, the formation of a Melville society resurrected his work, and assured that for the next two decades Melville and his writing attracted more research and scholarship than any other American author. In 2011, a Canadian television mini-series, "Moby Dick," was released and received two ACC nominations in 2012. "Moby Dick" was nominated as one of America's 100 best-loved novels by PBS's "The Great American Read."
Bio by: Iola