A young wanderer signs aboard a whaling ship and finds himself bound to a captain consumed by a single, unrelenting obsession. Herman Melville’s 19th-century epic is part seafaring adventure, part meditation on fate, nature, and the limits of human will. Heard aloud, its rolling, sermon-like prose takes on a momentum that the page can only hint at.
Listen to Moby Dick Free30-day free trial • Your first audiobook free • Cancel anytimeWhat Moby Dick is about
Narrated by the restless seaman Ishmael, Moby Dick follows his decision to leave land behind and ship out from a New England port aboard a whaling vessel. Once at sea, he comes under the command of Captain Ahab, a brooding figure driven by a fixation on a particular white whale. What begins as a working voyage gradually becomes the pursuit of something far larger and more dangerous than a single catch.
Published in the mid-1800s, Melville’s novel weaves its central chase together with vivid digressions on whaling, the ocean, and the men who make their living on it. By turns adventurous, philosophical, and darkly funny, it builds toward an encounter that has fascinated readers for generations. Spoiler-free, it remains one of American literature’s most ambitious and atmospheric journeys.
| Author | Herman Melville |
|---|---|
| ISBN | 4064066883133 |
| List price | $10.99 |
Why Moby Dick is great on audio
Melville’s prose is famously oratorical, full of long, surging sentences and shifts between salty dialogue and grand reflection, which makes it especially rewarding to hear performed. The voices of Ishmael, Ahab, and the ship’s varied crew come alive in audio, and the rhythm of the sea passages carries you along. It is a listen to settle into rather than rush.
Who should listen
This one is for listeners who love sweeping classic literature and adventure on a grand scale, and who don’t mind a story that pauses to ponder big questions. If you enjoy richly written 19th-century fiction, maritime tales, or character studies of obsession, it will reward your attention. Casual listeners wanting a quick, light read may find its scope demanding.
If you like Moby Dick, listen to these next
- Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
- Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
- Animal Farm by George Orwell
How to get the Moby Dick audiobook free
Yes — the easiest way to get the Moby Dick audiobook free is with an Audiobooks.com free trial. Your first audiobook is free, so you can listen to Moby Dick during the 30-day trial and cancel anytime.
Listen to Moby Dick Free30-day free trial • Your first audiobook free • Cancel anytimeFrequently asked questions
Is Moby Dick a true story?
No, it is a work of fiction, though Melville drew on his own time at sea and on real accounts of whaling voyages and whale encounters from the era. The result blends realistic seafaring detail with invented characters and a dramatic central pursuit.
How can I listen to the Moby Dick audiobook free?
You can get the Moby Dick audiobook free through an Audiobooks.com free trial. The trial gives you your first audiobook free to listen to during a 30-day trial, and you can cancel anytime. Note that a free-trial title is for listening during the trial; only audiobooks you purchase are kept after you cancel.
Is Moby Dick hard to follow in audio?
It can be denser than a typical novel, with long descriptive and philosophical chapters alongside the main story. Many listeners actually find audio helps, since hearing the rhythm and dialogue makes Melville’s elaborate prose easier to absorb than reading it silently.
Do I need to know anything about whaling or the classics first?
Not at all. The book introduces the world of whaling as it goes, and no prior background is required. A willingness to enjoy a slower, immersive classic is the main thing it asks of you.

