⚠️This fact has been debunked
Common myth. Actual sales during Melville's lifetime: ~3,715 copies total (3,215 US + 500 UK). Initial US printing was 2,915 copies, with additional printings in 1855 (250), 1863 (253), and 1871 (277). While commercially unsuccessful, it sold far more than 50 copies.
During his lifetime, Herman Melville's Moby Dick sold only 50 copies.
The Moby Dick Sales Myth: More Than 50 Copies
One of literature's most persistent myths claims that Herman Melville's masterpiece Moby-Dick sold a mere 50 copies during his lifetime. It's a tale of tragic irony: the great American novel, destined to become required reading in schools worldwide, barely noticed in its own time. There's just one problem—it's completely false.
The Real Numbers
During Melville's lifetime (he died in 1891), Moby-Dick sold approximately 3,715 copies—3,215 in the United States and 500 in the United Kingdom. The initial American printing alone was 2,915 copies, with subsequent printings of 250 copies in 1855, 253 in 1863, and 277 in 1871.
About 1,500 copies flew off the shelves within 11 days of publication in 1851. Not exactly blockbuster territory, but hardly the literary ghost town the myth suggests.
Still a Flop (Just Not That Bad)
Here's the thing: Moby-Dick was a commercial failure. Melville earned just $1,260 from it—roughly $45,000 in today's money for years of work on an epic novel. By the time he died, the book was out of print and largely forgotten. The myth gets the spirit right, even if the numbers are wildly wrong.
Sales dropped dramatically after that initial burst—fewer than 300 copies in the second year, then averaging just 27 copies annually for the next 34 years. The book became something worse than controversial: irrelevant.
Why the Myth Persists
The "50 copies" story is too perfect not to repeat. It amplifies the tragedy of an unrecognized genius, making the eventual redemption even sweeter. In the 1920s—three decades after Melville's death—literary critics "rediscovered" Moby-Dick and declared it an undisputed masterpiece.
The myth also confuses different metrics. Maybe someone misremembered the annual sales (27 per year for decades)? Or conflated first edition printings with actual sales? Regardless, the exaggeration stuck because it makes for a better story than "moderately unsuccessful book eventually finds audience."
The Takeaway
Yes, Melville died thinking himself a failure. Yes, Moby-Dick was ignored by his contemporaries. But thousands of people did read it during his lifetime—they just didn't recognize they were holding a future classic. Sometimes the truth is dramatic enough without the embellishment.