Track Section Length
1 Bartleby, the Scrivener  - Part 01 35:20
2 Bartleby, the Scrivener  - Part 02 33:38
3 Bartleby, the Scrivener  - Part 03 25:27
4 Bartleby, the Scrivener  - Part 04 20:45

Production
Read by: Bob Neufeld
Book Coordinator: Bob Neufeld
Meta Coordinator: Karen Savage
Proof Listener: Hugh Gillis

Artwork
Cover: Painting of a scrivener, author unknown
Inset: “A Money-Scrivener”, 1801, by Thos. Rowlandson
Inset: Etching of Joseph O. Eaton's portrait of Herman Melville. Date Published c. 1944, painting created before 1891
Insert DVD: Broadway from the Post Office (Wall Street), c. 1909, by Colin Campbell Cooper J., (1856-1937)
Insert CD: Wall Street Ferry Ship c. 1900 by Colin Campbell Cooper Jr., (1856-1937)


In an October 1939 radio broadcast Winston Churchill described his difficulty in understanding the actions of Russia by saying “it is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma”. The remark could easily have come from the narrator of Melville’s Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street in trying to explain the baffling behavior of the title character, a clerk employed at his law firm.  Bartleby has been engaged to help with a surge in business and performs admirably until one day he declines to proofread a document with the statement “I would prefer not to”.  He refuses more and more assignments with the same response until he spends long periods staring out the window at a brick wall. The narrator attempts to reason with him and understand, but to no avail.  One Sunday he stops in to find that Bartleby is living at the office. Too timid to evict him, the narrator moves the office instead.  The new tenants soon ask for help in removing Bartleby, who by now sits on the steps all day and sleeps in the doorway at night.  Before long he is removed and tossed in prison. The narrator visits and bribes a guard to make sure he eats, but learns a few days later that he had “preferred not to” eat and has died of starvation. Critics and scholars have interpreted the curious character from a variety of perspectives over the years.  While no one is quite sure what it all means, they agree that the story is the masterpiece of Melville’s shorter works.

Play sample: 

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Item Info
EAN - DVD case 0682550991399
EAN - CD jacket 0682550991597
Media MP3 CD
Package DVD box
Author Herman Melville (1819 - 1891)
Year 1852
Recording
Read by Bob Neufeld
Length 1 hour and 55 minutes
Type of Reading Solo

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Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street

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(SKU DB-6005) (EAN 0682550991399)
(SKU CJ-6005) (EAN 0682550991597)
(SKU CD-6005)
(SKU DL-6005)

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Tags: Bartleby, Melville