A whale of a time: Moby Dick marathon draws dedicated crew to overnight at SF ship-shaped museum

San Francisco hosted a 25-hour ultra-endurance test last weekend. It wasn’t a feat of running or physical fitness, but of literary prowess: a non-stop reading of an infamously challenging and lengthy novel, “Moby Dick.”

From noon on Oct. 19 to around 1 p.m. the next day, some 300 people came through the San Francisco Maritime Museum to witness and partake in a collective reading journey involving a notorious whale.

The idea of holding an overnight Melville-athon began in New England. Massachusetts’ New Bedford Whaling Museum has held a Moby Dick Marathon every year since 1997. The whale-centric event migrated to San Francisco in the 1990s, and began returning more regularly starting in 2015, says Gina Baldi, reference librarian at the San Francisco Maritime Museum and one of the event’s organizers.

Sponsored by the San Francisco Maritime National Park Association, the event is held on a weekend as close to Oct. 19 as possible. It was on that night in 1860 that author Herman Melville visited San Francisco and dined with Jesse Fremont at Fort Mason, Baldi says.

It’s Baldi’s favorite museum event, because it draws a wide community to celebrate a book — one she thinks is beautiful, even if there are haters out there who resisted the read in high school.

“’Moby Dick’ is the great American novel, I think. It’s definitely the great American maritime novel,” she says. “It is challenging, but once you immerse yourself in the language, you realize how special it is. It’s funny. It’s poignant. It’s a history lesson. It’s everything, all in one.”

A junior whale hunter kit is spotted at the 2024 Moby Dick Marathon, a 25-hour reading of the Herman Melville novel held Oct. 19-20 in San Francisco. (Courtesy Kayleigh McCollum) 

Nicole Odell, artistic director at San Francisco’s sketch comedy company, Killing My Lobster, says she first participated in the event about five years ago. She quickly came to appreciate the marathon literary and theatrical production and the fact that it is held inside a historical museum, an Art Deco building that looks — appropriately — like a ship.

“It’s probably no secret that a lot of cultural institutions are suffering in San Francisco,” she says. “My hope is that this will continue to spark curiosity in people.”

Nathaniel Bice, an artist and set designer, creates an original linotype. (Courtesy Kayleigh McCollum) 

In the early hours of the marathon, book lovers and whale devotees listened appreciatively, as people took turns at the lectern reading a chapter they’d signed up to read or perform aloud. Some came in costume — one wore a hand-knit orca beanie and a graphic T-shirt emblazoned with the words “Call me.” Moby Dick cognoscenti could fill in the missing word — Ishmael — for themselves. Others dressed as seagoing tars, burlesque Navy girls and a chaplain.

Every time the performance is held, Baldi says, the event gets bigger. This year’s iteration included a 24-hour crochet circle led by park ranger Noemesha Williams, who plans to transform the resulting yarn crafts into a community quilt, as well as an array of performances by people eager to bring pizzazz to their allotted chapters.

Typically, Baldi says, the attendance starts strong – during the first couple of hours of the 2024 marathon, the room held more than 50 attendees. As the hours progress, people tend to trickle out, then return in waves.

During the 2 to 5 a.m. stretch, the crowd typically dies down to only the most die-hard attendees. But even the wee hours of this year’s marathon featured a “good audience,” Baldi says, with readers and listeners alike rewarded by the spectacle of sunrise through the windows of the museum.

The San Francisco Maritime Museum hosted a 25-hour Moby Dick marathon Oct. 19-20, during which people took turns reading and performing the entire Herman Melville novel aloud. (Courtesy Kayleigh McCollum) 

By mid-morning, fans were surging back, eager to get in for the finale and the destruction of — no spoilers!

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San Francisco resident Joe Murphy, who read one of the novel’s 135 chapters aloud, says it took him three years to read the novel for the first time. In the process, though, he fell in love with it.

“It’s the greatest book and yet completely insufferable,” he says. “It’s been haunting me ever since.”

Looking to get your maritime fix before the next Moby Dick marathon? The Maritime Museum is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday-Sunday at Aquatic Park Cove and hosts various special events, including monthly sea chantey singing sessions. The next is set for 11 a.m. Nov. 16.

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