By turns travelogue, satire, allegory and philosophical speculation,
Mardi is Melville's first attempt at a more ambitious form of novel. The
immediate precursor to his masterpiece, Moby Dick, it was a commercial
and critical disaster for the author. It followed two straightforward
adventure tales, Typee and Omoo, which were highly popular, and mid-19th
century readers expected another. Although Mardi appears to start on
that familiar sunny voyage, the island world it explores ("Mardi") soon
darkens and becomes problematical. This novel is now recognized as being
far ahead of its time, and as an essential development in Melville's
canon.