Billy Budd, Sailor: A Classic Tale of Innocence Betrayed on the High Seas
| PUBLISHER | Tyndale Entertainment (06/01/2007) |
| PRODUCT TYPE | Audio (Compact Disc) |
Description
Listeners will be captivated by this moving tale of good versus evil through the life of winsome young sailor Billy Budd. Aboard a 1700s British warship, virtuous Billy is unfairly accused of treason by the villainous Master of Arms--a cold-blooded superior officer intent on Billy's destruction. Adapted from Herman Melville's famous novel and presented by Focus on the Family's Peabody Award-winning Radio Theatre team, Billy Budd will remind listeners of another man, perfectly just, who suffered and died a criminal's death.
Show More
Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13:
9781589975071
ISBN-10:
1589975073
Binding:
CD-Audio (CD Standard Audio Format)
Content Language:
English
More Product Details
Carton Quantity:
170
Product Dimensions:
6.50 x 0.40 x 5.55 inches
Weight:
0.22 pound(s)
Country of Origin:
US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Fiction | Religious - General
Grade Level:
3rd Grade
and up
Dewey Decimal:
FIC
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
Listeners will be captivated by this moving tale of good versus evil through the life of winsome young sailor Billy Budd. Aboard a 1700s British warship, virtuous Billy is unfairly accused of treason by the villainous Master of Arms--a cold-blooded superior officer intent on Billy's destruction. Adapted from Herman Melville's famous novel and presented by Focus on the Family's Peabody Award-winning Radio Theatre team, Billy Budd will remind listeners of another man, perfectly just, who suffered and died a criminal's death.
Show More
Based on a Book by:
Melville, Herman
Herman Melville was an American novelist, poet, and lecturer best known for his classic novel Moby-Dick, as well as for his short fiction "Bartleby, the Scrivener," and the unfinished "Billy Budd, Sailor." Educated as a teacher and later as an engineer, Melville s writing was heavily influenced by his time aboard the whaling ship Acushnet, and his month-long captivity by Typee natives on Nuka Hiva island. Although Melville experienced success early in his writing career, public indifference to his masterpiece, Moby-Dick, resulted in waning attention, and his work was almost entirely disregarded by the time of this death in 1891. Melville s work experienced a revival in the early twentieth century, and he is now considered one of the pre-eminent American writers of his time. He is also one of the most-studied novelists, and was the first writer to be collected and published by the Library of America.
Show More
List Price $14.97
Your Price
$14.82
