Wait Whitman found Omoo "the most readable sort of reading" and praised its "richly good-natured style." But many reviewers doubted the author's veracity and some objected to his "raciness" and "indecencies." Some also denounced his criticism of missionary endeavors, for Melville returned in Omoo to the attack upon the missionaries he had begun in Typee, making his second book more polemical than his first. Over the years, however, readers have been charmed by both books. The reading of Omoo influenced such later visitors to Tahiti as Pierre Loti, Henry Adams, John LaFarge, and Jack London; it was the book that sent Robert Louis Stevenson to the South Seas.
| Seller | Condition | Comments | Price |
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Burke's Book Store
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Very Good
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$6.75
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Midtown Scholar Bookstore
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Good |
$7.27
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Ezekial Books, LLC
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Very Good
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$7.43
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indoo.com
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New |
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ErgodeBooks
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Good |
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ErgodeBooks
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Bonita
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Good
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$42.81
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Just one more Chapter
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New |
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Bonita
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New
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$70.58
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