<em>Melvillean Parasites</em> addresses an aspect of Herman Melville’s authorship largely overlooked by previous scholars: the abundance of narrators and characters in his writings in search of food—an aim they typically pursue through sponging off the people they encounter.<br/>Deploying the conceptual figure of the <em>parasite </em>as its primary analytical tool, the book interprets how the dream of a free meal plays out and is given literary form in <em>Typee</em> (1846), “Bartleby, the Scrivener” (1853), “Jimmy Rose” (1855), and <em>The Confidence-Man</em> (1857). In so doing, <em>Melvillean Parasites</em> aims to explain how Melville’s engagement with ethico-political issues concerning nourishment, dependency upon others, hospitality, and responsibility toward strangers, evolved and changed over time. Compared to the tendency of dehumanizing the parasite found in many of his contemporaries, the book claims that what sets him apart, is his insight into the unavoidable parasitic tendencies of us all: Herman Melville—patron saint of the parasite.<br/><em>Melvillean Parasites</em> is intended for scholars, students, and general readers with an interest in the concept of the parasite, as well as Herman Melville’s authorship, American literature, and 19th century studies in general.