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Snow Falling on Cedars | A Tale of Two Ishmaels
Bussey holds a master’s degree in interdisciplinary studies and a bachelor’s degree in English literature. She is an independent writer specializing in literature. In the following essay, she demonstrates how Ishmael Chambers would have experienced a different fate had he been more like Moby Dick’s narrator, Ishmael.
In many ways, Ishmael Chambers, the World War II veteran and small-town reporter in David Guterson's Snow Falling on Cedars is similar to his literary namesake in Herman Melville's classic Moby Dick. In fact, the two characters have enough in common to warrant a comparison in an effort to understand Ishmael Chambers better. Fundamentally, however, there are significant differences in the two characters' ways of understanding the world. If Ishmael Chambers had been more like...
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- Snow Falling on Cedars: Introduction
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Summary
- Snow Falling on Cedars: David Guterson Biography
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Themes
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Style
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Historical Context
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Critical Overview
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Character Analysis
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Essays and Criticism
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Compare and Contrast
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Topics for Further Study
- Snow Falling on Cedars: Media Adaptations
- Snow Falling on Cedars: What Do I Read Next?
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