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Books by Joseph Conrad

Born: 12/03/1857; Died: 08/03/1924

Joseph Conrad Biography & Notes


Joseph Conrad (December 3, 1857- August 3, 1924) was a Polish-born British novelist. Some of his works have been labelled romantic, although Conrad's romanticism is tempered with irony and a fine sense of man's capacity for self-deception. Many critics have placed him as a forerunner of modernism.

Conrad was born Jozef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski in Berdyczow (Berdychiv), then Poland under Russian rule, now Ukraine. His father, an aristocrat, writer, and translator, was arrested by the Russian authorities in Warsaw for his activities in support of the 1863 insurrection, and was exiled to Siberia. His mother died of tuberculosis in 1865, as did his father four years later in Krakow, leaving Conrad orphaned at the age of eleven.

He was placed in the care of his uncle, a more cautious figure than either of his parents, who nevertheless allowed Conrad to travel to Marseille and begin his career as a seaman at the age of 17. Conrad lived an adventurous life, becoming involved in gunrunning and political conspiracy, which he later fictionalized in his novel The Arrow of Gold. In 1878, after a failed attempt at suicide, Conrad took service on his first British ship. He learned English before the age of 21, and gained both his Master Mariner's certificate and British citizenship in 1886. He first arrived in England at the port of Lowestoft, Suffolk, and lived later in London and near Canterbury, Kent.

In 1894, at the age of 36, he left the sea to become an English author. His first novel, Almayer's Folly, set on the east coast of Borneo, was published in 1895. The lingua franca of educated Europeans at that time was French, Conrad's second language, and it is remarkable that Conrad could write so fluently and effectively in his third language. Many of his early novels are set on board ships. His novel Nostromo is a panoramic study of revolution in South America, while The Secret Agent and Under Western Eyes are among the first modern novels to treat the subjects of terrorism and espionage.

His literary work bridges the gap between the realist literary tradition of writers such as Charles Dickens and the emergent modernist schools of writing. Interestingly, he despised Dostoevsky, and Russian writers as a rule, possibly due to his political inclinations, making an exception only for Ivan Turgenev. Conrad is now best known for the novella Heart of Darkness, which has been seen as a scathing indictment of colonialism. Chinua Achebe, however, has argued that Conrad's language and imagery is inescapably racist. Some would claim that these can both be true.

In 1923 he was offered but declined a Knighthood.
Joseph Conrad died of a heart attack, and was interred in Canterbury Cemetery, Canterbury, England.



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Adventure Classics Collection Heart of Darkness, Moby Dick, the Sea Wolf, the Tour of the World in Eighty Days by Joseph Conrad, Jack London, Herman Melville, Jules Verne ( 2000)
Almayer's Folley, a Story of an Eastern River by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Almayer's Folly Almayer's Folly A Story of an Eastern River by Joseph Conrad ( 1971)
A white man living in the jungle of Malay plans to return to Europe until his daughter announces her intentions to marry a savage.
Amy Foster by Joseph Conrad ( 2004)
The Arrow of Gold The Arrow of Gold A Story Between Two Notes by Joseph Conrad ( 2001)
Conrad evokes events which occured during the second Carlist War in the story of a man's love for a mysterious woman and for the sea.
At Sea with Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad, J. G. Sutherland ( 2007)
Chance Chance A Tale in Two Parts by Joseph Conrad ( 1993)
Conrad's most technically ambitious work is a psychologically penetrating portrait of a young woman's transformation from a vulnerable, almost tragic figure to a self-respecting woman--and Conrad's only novel to feature a female protagonist.
Classic Radio Performances Classic Radio Performances The Ralph Richardson Collection by Joseph Conrad, Henry James, W. Somerset Maugham, Laurence Sterne, J. B. Priestley ( 1997)
Cliffsnotes Victory by Joseph Conrad ( 1981)
The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 2008)
The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad 1861-1897 by Joseph Conrad, Laurence Davies, Frederick Robert Karl ( 1983)
Gathers letters to Conrad's friends, family, fellow writers, and editors from the first forty years of his life.
Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad 1898-1902 by Joseph Conrad, Laurence Davies, Frederick Robert Karl ( 1986)
Gathers letters to Conrad's friends, family, fellow writers, and editors from the first forty years of his life.
The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad, 1908-1911 The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad, 1908-1911 by Frederick R. Karl, Laurence Davies, Joseph Conrad ( 1991)
The Collected Stories of Joseph Conrad The Collected Stories of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
All twenty-two of Conrad's short stories--including "The Idiots," "The Lagoon," and "The Secret Sharer"--are brought together in one volume. Because he is best known for his novels and tales, Conrad's stories have, mistakenly, been overlooked. However, as will be immediately evident upon reading this volume, his stories bear all the hallmarks of his more celebrated fiction. Rooted in the seafaring tradition of storytelling, these stories range far and wide--with settings as diverse as the
The Collected Stories. by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
The Collected Tales of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 1995)
Conrad is best known for his ability to transport his readers to exotic and dangerous places--both psychologically and geographically. This collection of Conrad's tales includes "The Heart of Darkness," "The Typhoon," and "A Smile of Fortune," among others.
The Complete Short Fiction of Joseph Conrad The Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
A Concordance to Conrad's A Set of Six by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender ( 1981)
A Concordance to Conrad's Almayer's Folly by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender, Sue M. Briggum ( 1978)
A Concordance to Conrad's Lord Jim Verbal Index, Word Frequency Table, and Field of Reference by Joseph Conrad, James W. Parins, Todd K. Bender, Robert J. Dilligan ( 1976)
A Concordance to Conrad's The Arrow of Gold by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender, Paul L. Gaston ( 1981)
A Concordance to Conrad's The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender ( 1979)
A Concordance to Conrad's Victory by Joseph Conrad, James W. Parins, Todd K. Bender, Robert J. Dilligan ( 1979)
Concordance to Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender, Robert J. Dilligan, Sybyl C. Jacobson ( 1973)
Concordances to Conrad's The Shadow Line and Youth A Narrative by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender ( 1980)
Concordances to Conrad's Typhoon and Other Stories, and Within the Tides by Joseph Conrad, Todd K. Bender, Kirsten A. Bender ( 1982)
Congo Diary and Other Uncollected Pieces by Joseph Conrad, Zdzisaw Najder ( 1978)
Conrad's Prefaces to His Works by Edward Garnett, David Garnett, Joseph Conrad ( 1971)
Like Henry James, Joseph Conrad wrote prefaces to many of his works--long, candid, and very personal essays that provide insight into why and how he wrote each book, and give the real-life background of each as well as the history of its composition. The prefaces are collected here with an introduction by Edward Garnett, Conrad's editor, revealing important information on the editing, revising, and publishing process.
Cuentos De Inquietud by Joseph Conrad, Marco Aurelio Galindo ( 1994)
El Duelo/the Duel by Joseph Conrad ( 1983)
End Of The Tether by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Falk A Reminiscence Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
In his introduction to the volume of stories in which "Falk" appears, Conrad writes: "But what is the subject of 'Falk'? I personally do not feel so very certain about it. He who reads must find out for himself. My intention in writing 'Falk' was not to shock anybody....I may safely say that Falk is absolutely true to my experience of certain straightforward characters combining a perfectly natural ruthlessness with a certain amount of moral delicacy."
Falk A Reminiscence by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
Falk, Amy Foster, and Tomorrow by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Fictions of Empire Fictions of Empire Complete Texts With Introduction, Historical Contexts, Critical Essays by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)

This unique volume brings together for the first time these three short fictional works written by British authors in the late 1880s and 1890s. Each writer takes a different perspective on the topic of imperialism. Contextual materials include related works by Darwin, Melville, and other contemporaries; biographical backgrounds; and modern reactions to the novels.

Freya of the Seven Isles Freya of the Seven Isles by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Freya, LA De Las Siete Islas by Joseph Conrad, R., Vazquez Zamora ( 1994)
Gaspar Ruiz Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2009)
Great Short Works of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 1958)
The hard-to-find short works of this American
Heart Of Darkness And Selected Short Fiction Heart Of Darkness And Selected Short Fiction by Joseph Conrad, A. Michael Matin ( 2004)
Heart Of Darkness Great Authors Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Heart of Darkness Heart of Darkness Level 5 by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
Conrad's only spy novel, THE SECRET AGENT is set in the filthy and depraved city of London of the 1880s. Adolf Verloc, a bumbling police informer and the undercover agent for an unnamed European embassy, is recruited to bomb the Greenwich Observatory. Horrified and afraid, he fools his wife (who married him only so he would support her) into letting her half-witted brother, Stevie, help him; Stevie explodes the bomb prematurely and blows himself to bits. When she discovers the truth, Verloc's wife goes mad with rage and grief. This bleakly ironic tale of isolation, despair, and lack of love is perhaps Conrad's most powerful novel, and is a dark satire of English life, with amoral characters on both sides of the law. In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism by Ross C. Murfin ( 1989)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness Heart of Darkness Complete, Authoritative Text With Biographical and Historical Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Five Comtemporary Critical Perspectives by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness & Selections from the Congo Diary Heart of Darkness & Selections from the Congo Diary by Joseph Conrad ( 2000)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness and Other Stories Heart of Darkness and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1998)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness and Other Stories Heart of Darkness and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness and Other Tales by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. Marlow's encounter with the mysterious and corrupted Kurtz, who dies proclaiming the "horror" of what he found in the Congo, is the novel's defining moment, when Marlow recognizes his kinship with Kurtz's corruption. This insight enables Marlow to retreat from Kurtz's world and return to England. Kurtz, in his attempts to reconcile his noble ideas with his greed, can't survive.
Heart of Darkness and the Secret Sharer Heart of Darkness and the Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad ( 1981)
Heart Of Darkness. The story of the civilized, enlightened Mr. Kurtz who embarks on a harrowing "night journey" into the savage heart of Africa, only to find his dark and evil soul. The Secret Sharer. The saga of a young, inexperienced skipper forced to decide the fate of a fugitive sailor who killed a man in self-defense. As he faces his first moral test the skipper discovers a terrifying truth -- and comes face to face with the secret itself. Heart Of Darkness and The Secret Sharer draw on actual events and people that Conrad met or heard about during his many far-flung travels. In portraying men whose incredible journeys on land and at sea are also symbolic voyages into their own mysterious depths, these two masterful works give credence to Conrad's acclaim as a major psychological writer.
Hugh Walpole Appreciations by Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, Joseph Hergesheimer ( 1976)
Hugh Walpole; Appreciations by Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, Joseph Hergesheimer ( 1973)
The Inheritors An Extravagant Story Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad, Ford Madox Ford ( 2003)
Written as a collaborative effort between Conrad and Ford, this book takes on themes that both authors were passionately concerned with--the modernization of Western society, changing traditions, the corruptibility of humanity.
Joseph Conrad Times Remembered Ojciec Jest Tutaj by Joseph Conrad ( 2008)
Joseph Conrad Heart Of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 2004)
Joseph Conrad on Fiction by Joseph Conrad, Walter F. Wright ( 1964)
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and the Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad, Jeremy Jericho ( 1984)
A guide to reading "Heart of Darkness" and "The Secret Sharer" with a critical and appreciative mind. Includes background on the author's life and times, sample tests, term paper suggestions, and a reading list.
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness/the Investigator Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness/the Investigator by Joseph Conrad, Revben Ship ( 2000)
Joseph Conrad's Letters to R. B. Cunninghame Graham by Joseph Conrad ( 2010)
Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim and Other Works by Joseph Conrad ( 1987)
Juventud, la linea de sombra / Youth, a Narrative, 1902 The Shadow-Line, a Confession, 1917 Juventud, la linea de sombra / Youth, a Narrative, 1902 The Shadow-Line, a Confession, 1917 by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
La Linea De Sombra by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
La Posada De Las Dos Brujasu La Posada De Las Dos Brujasu by Joseph Conrad ( 2001)
The Lagoon by Joseph Conrad ( 1989)
While the woman he loves lies dying, Arsat, a young Malay, relates how he and his brother abducted her and how he allowed his beloved brother to perish so that he and the woman could escape their pursuers.
The Lagoon and Other Stories The Lagoon and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1997)
Twelve classic tales by Joseph Conrad mirror, in form and theme, Conrad's own ambiguous and hybrid status in imperial England. William Atkinson's Introduction explores the "double-voiced" nature of Conrad's narratives as well as his ironic treatment of the adventure-romance genre popularized by his contemporaries Stevenson, Kipling, and Rider Haggard.
Last Essays by Joseph Conrad ( 1926)
Letters Joseph Conrad to Richard Curle by Joseph Conrad, Richard Curle ( 1978)
Letters of Joseph Conrad to Marguerite Poradowska, 1890-1920. by Joseph Conrad ( 1973)
Letters:Joseph Conrad to Richard Curle Joseph Conrad to Richard Curle by Joseph Conrad, Richard Curle ( 1973)
Listy Do Conrada by Joseph Conrad, Roza Jabkowska, Tadeusz Bobrowski ( 1981)
Lord Jim Lord Jim Authoritative Text, Backgrounds, Sources, Criticism by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
LORD JIM, Conrad's powerful tale of an idealistic young man and the moment of weakness that determines the rest of his life, explores the nature of innocence, courage, and heroism. It includes an episode from Conrad's own life, in which he was injured by a falling spar while serving as a first mate on the "Highland Forest", and hospitalized in Singapore.
Lord Jim Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad ( 1997)
Retells the classic story of a young Englishman branded as a coward who seeks personal redemption for an act of selfishness, as a graphic novel with study guide.
Lord Jim Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad, Cedric Watts ( 2000)
LORD JIM, Conrad's powerful tale of an idealistic young man and the moment of weakness that determines the rest of his life, explores the nature of innocence, courage, and heroism. It includes an episode from Conrad's own life, in which he was injured by a falling spar while serving as a first mate on the "Highland Forest", and hospitalized in Singapore
Lord Jim & Nostromo Lord Jim & Nostromo by Joseph Conrad ( 2000)
A unique pairing of two Conrad novels--Lord Jim and Nostromo--celebrates the literary genius of Joseph Conrad, with commentary by Edward W. Said, V.S. Naipaul, Harold Bloom, Virginia Woolf, Robert Penn Warren, and Joseph Conrad. Reprint.
Lord Jim/Heart of Darkness/Nostromo/3 Books in 1 Volume by Joseph Conrad ( 1994)
LORD JIM is Conrad's powerful tale of an idealistic young man, and the moment of weakness that determines the rest of his life, explores the nature of innocence, courage, and heroism. In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. NOSTROMO, considered by many to be Conrad's greatest novel, is a pessimistic novel about political power in a Latin American country, and the inhumanity and brutality that result when ideals and reality clash.
Marcel Proust - An English Tribute by Joseph Conrad ( 1975)
Masterpieces of Modern Short Fiction Masterpieces of Modern Short Fiction by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Joseph Conrad, Philip Roth, Orson Welles, Isabel Allende, Aldous Huxley, Joyce Carol Oates, Paul Theroux, Ambrose Bierce, Elliott Gould, Raymond Chandler, Ron Silver, David Birney, Roscoe Lee Browne, Elizabeth Pena ( 1998)
Here is an eclectic compendium of the finest short fiction of the last 150 years, featuring works by Isabelle Allende, Ambrose Bierce, Raymond Chandler, Joseph Conrad, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Aldous Huxley, Joyce Carol Oates, Philip Roth, Paul Theroux, and others.
Maxnotes Heart of Darkness Maxnotes Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, Resed Staff ( 1996)
The Mirror of the Sea The Mirror of the Sea by Joseph Conrad ( 1988)
In THE MIRROR OF THE SEA, Conrad records some of his impressions and memories of his years on the ocean.
The Mirror of the Sea and a Personal Record by Joseph Conrad ( 1988)
In THE MIRROR OF THE SEA, Conrad records some of his impressions and memories of his years on the ocean. In A PERSONAL RECORD, in addition to his own life, Conrad also writes about Henry James, Anatole France, Stephen Crane, Poland, war, the sinking of the Titanic, and much more.
The Nigger of the "Narcissus" Typhoon Amy Foster Falk To-Morrow by Joseph Conrad ( 1974)
In Conrad's 1897 novel, THE NIGGER OF THE NARCISSUS, the morale of a ship's crew is undermined by sympathy for a dying black sailor: a paradoxical situation that Conrad returned to often in his novels, which are frequently about the danger as well as the absolute necessity of human relationships.
Nigger of the Narcissus by Joseph Conrad ( 1978)
In Conrad's 1897 novel, the morale of a ship's crew is undermined by sympathy for a dying black sailor: a paradoxical situation that Conrad returned to often in his novels, which are frequently about the danger as well as the absolute necessity of human relationships.
Nigger of the Narcissus, Typhoon, Falk, and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1979)
The Nigger of the Narcissus/the Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 2001)
Nostromo Nostromo by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
A pessimistic novel about political power in a Latin American country, and the inhumanity and brutality that result when ideals and reality clash. NOSTROMO is considered by many to be Conrad's greatest novel. It was one he hesitated to write, he says in the introduction, "as if warned by the instinct of self-preservation from venturing on a distant and toilsome journey into a land full of intrigues and revolutions." But, he concludes, "It had to be done."
Notes by Joseph Conrad Written in a Set of His First Editions in the Possession of Richard Curle by Joseph Conrad, Richard Curle ( 1976)
Notes by Joseph Conrad Written in a Set of His First Editions in the Possession of Richard Curle, with an Introd and Explanatory Comments by Joseph Conrad ( 1974)
Notes on Life and Letters Notes on Life and Letters by Joseph Conrad ( 2004)
An Outcast of the Island An Outcast of the Island Conrad's Brooding Tale of Moral Dilemma, Isolation and Human Urges by Joseph Conrad ( 1997)
Conrad's second novel (1896) is set at an isolated trading post in the town of Macassar, on an island in Indonesia, where a fairly lowly Dutch clerk named Peter Willems finds himself lost and bewildered in an alien world. As he tries to find a way to survive there, his own intrigues prove to be his undoing, and in the end he essentially loses his soul. As Conrad writes in his introduction to the novel, "The man who suggested Willems to me was not particularly interesting in himself. My interest was aroused by his dependent position, his strange, dubious status of a mistrusted, disliked, worn-out European living on the reluctant toleration of that Settlement hidden in the heart of the forest-land, up that sombre stream which our ship was the only white men's ship to visit."
An Outcast of the Islands by Joseph Conrad ( 1966)
Conrad's second novel (1896) is set at an isolated trading post in the town of Macassar, on an island in Indonesia, where a fairly lowly Dutch clerk named Peter Willems finds himself lost and bewildered in an alien world. As he tries to find a way to survive there, his own intrigues prove to be his undoing, and in the end he essentially loses his soul. As Conrad writes in his introduction to the novel, "The man who suggested Willems to me was not particularly interesting in himself. My interest was aroused by his dependent position, his strange, dubious status of a mistrusted, disliked, worn-out European living on the reluctant toleration of that Settlement hidden in the heart of the forest-land, up that sombre stream which our ship was the only white men's ship to visit."
A Personal Record by Joseph Conrad ( 2008)
As Conrad writes in his introduction to these reminiscences, "[T]hese memories put down without any regard for established conventions have not been thrown off without system and purpose. They have their hope and their aim. The hope that from the reading of these pages there may emerge at last the vision of a personality; the man behind the books so fundamentally dissimilar as, for instance, ALMAYER'S FOLLY and THE SECRET AGENT, and yet a coherent, justifiable personality both in its origin and in its action. This is the hope. The immediate aim, closely associated with the hope, is to give the record of personal memories by presenting faithfully the feelings and sensations connected with the writing of my first book and with my first contact with the sea." He also writes about Henry James, Anatole France, Stephen Crane, Poland, war, the sinking of the Titanic, and much more.
A Personal Record the Mirror of the Sea A Personal Record the Mirror of the Sea The Mirror of the Sea by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
Joseph Conrad is a largely enigmatic presence in his novels, but in A Personal Record he decided to introduce his readers to "the figure behind the veil". Almost equally revealing is The Mirror of the Sea, written in "tribute to the sea, its ships, and its men, to whom I remain indebted for so much which has gone to make me what I am". Both are full of Conrad's anecdotes and adventures about smuggling arms to Don Carlos, a claimant to the Spanish throne, and characters like the great-uncle who once had to eat a Lithuanian dog during Napoleon's retreat from Moscow. They also let us see inside the young man who broke with his Polish background and was deeply inspired by the resilience and devotion to duty of his fellow British sailors. Every page is filled with a powerful moral intelligence and sense of history.
A Planter of Malta by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Polonia Y Rusia by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
The Portable Conrad The Portable Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
In honor of the 150th anniversary of the author's birth, a revised edition of the classic anthology features Conrad's most enduring works, including The Secret Sharer, The Heart of Darkness, The Nigger of the "Narcissus," and such shorter works as "Amy Forster" and "The Warrior's Soul," and excerpts from his letters. Reissue.
Readers Digest Best Loved Books for Young Readers The Call of the Wild and Typhoon by Joseph Conrad, Jack London ( 1989)
Readings on Heart of Darkness Readings on Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
Articles explore the themes and characters of "Heart of Darkness," discuss Conrad's style and methods, and examine the story in the context of African colonialism.
The Rescue A Romance of the Shallows Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
Conrad began this novel in the summer of 1898, laid it aside, and didn't finish it until 20 years later.
Romance by Joseph Conrad ( 2009)
A collaboration between Joseph Conrad and Ford Madox Ford, ROMANCE tells the story of John Kemp, an upstanding young Englishman who comes under the spell of Don Carlos, a South American landowner. Kemp is drawn into an adventurous world of pirates, the Caribbean, exotic love, and secrecy.
The Rover Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
A French pirate returns home but must flee again, pursued not only by the British but by the French in Conrad's tense novel set during the Napoleonic wars.
The Secret Agent The Secret Agent Library Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2001)
Conrad's only spy novel, THE SECRET AGENT is set in the filthy and depraved city of London of the 1880s. Adolf Verloc, a bumbling police informer and the undercover agent for an unnamed European embassy, is recruited to bomb the Greenwich Observatory. Horrified and afraid, he fools his wife (who married him only so he would support her) into letting her half-witted brother, Stevie, help him; Stevie explodes the bomb prematurely and blows himself to bits. When she discovers the truth, Verloc's wife goes mad with rage and grief. This bleakly ironic tale of isolation, despair, and lack of love is perhaps Conrad's most powerful novel, and is a dark satire of English life, with amoral characters on both sides of the law.
The Secret Sharer The Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad, Daniel R. Schwarz ( 1997)
One of Conrad's most celebrated stories, "The Secret Sharer" is about a ship's captain and his murderous double.
The Secret Sharer and Other Stories The Secret Sharer and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1993)
Three of conrad's most powerful stories of the sea--"Youth: A Narrative," "Typhoon" and " and "The Secret Sharer."
Selected Short Stories Selected Short Stories by Keith Carabine, Joseph Conrad ( 1998)
Selected Short Works by Joseph Conrad ( 2004)
Selected Works of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad, Steven J Kasdin ( 1994)
A Set of Six Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2008)
These six stories, Conrad says in his introduction, are all based in truth. The stories included are: "Gaspar Ruiz," "The Informer," "The Brute," "An Anarchist," "The Duel," and "Il Conde."
The Shadow-Line A Confession by Joseph Conrad ( 2009)
The Shorter Tales of Joseph Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 2005)
A Smile of Fortune A Harbour Story by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
El Sombrero De Tres Picos El Sombrero De Tres Picos by Joseph Conrad, P. De Alarcon ( 2000)
Some Reminiscences by Joseph Conrad ( 2008)
Sparknotes Heart of Darkness Sparknotes Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Stephen Crane a Study in American Letters 1923 by Joseph Conrad, Thomas Beer ( 2003)
Suspense Suspense by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
Presents a story of the Napoleonic Wars.
Swept from the Sea Swept from the Sea The Shooting Script by Joseph Conrad, Tim Willocks, Amy Foster ( 1998)
A major motion picture this fall from Phoenix Pictures, starring Vincent Perez, Rachel Weisz, Ian McKellan, and Kathy Bates, "To Love and Be Loved" is based on Joseph Conrad's short story "Amy Foster", a story of love set against the backdrop of 19th-century Cornwall. 20 photos.
TIFON by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
Tales of Land and Sea by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
Tales of Unrest Easyread Super Large 24pt Edition by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
In his short fiction, Conrad sought to explore the themes of betrayal, fear, and hope. This collection includes some of his greatest works, including "Karain" (subtitled "A Memory"), "The Lagoon," (his first short story, which was an outgrowth of his novel ALMAYER'S FOLLY), "An Outpost of Progress" (which has, according to Conrad, a "very different atmosphere" from "The Lagoon"), "The Idiots" (which Conrad considers "obviously derivative" and refuses to comment on), and "The Return" (which Conrad dismisses as "a left-handed attempt").
Three Great Tales by Joseph Conrad ( 1958)
Three Novels by Joseph Conrad ( 1970)
Three Sea Stories Three Sea Stories Typhoon, Falk, and the Shadow-Line by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
Tifon by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
An epic description of sea dangers. The strange case of Joseph Conrad, a writer born in Poland, who wrote some of the most beautiful descriptive novels of the English literature, has been presented in the history of literature as something exceptional. He was a sailor up to the age of forty, and Typhoon, as his other novels; reflects his experience in the sea. The description of the storm that attacks a ship in its way to Asia with a group of poor Chinese people returning to their mother land with their savings of life kept in little wood boxes, serves to make remarkable descriptions of the dangers of the ocean and to illustrate portraits of characters that go from the pusillanimous captain who cannot confront the danger up to the subordinates that end up saving the situation. It is a novel of constant suspense and a beautiful example of Conrad's production.
To-morrow by Joseph Conrad ( 2006)
Twixt Land & Sea Tales by Joseph Conrad ( 2005)
Twixt Land and Sea Three Tales by Joseph Conrad ( 2004)
This volume contains "A Smile of Fortune," "The Secret Sharer," and "Freya of the Seven Isles."
Typhon by Joseph Conrad ( 1973)
The story "Typhoon," like much of Conrad's fiction, deals with corruption and exploitation, this time on a passenger steamer caught in a typhoon in the China Sea.
Typhoon by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
Typhoon and Other Stories Typhoon and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 1991)
Introduction by Martin Seymour-Smith
Typhoon and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
The title story in this collection, like much of Conrad's fiction, deals with corruption and exploitation, this time on a passenger steamer caught in a typhoon in the China Sea.
Typhoon and Other Tales Typhoon and Other Tales by Joseph Conrad ( 2003)
The title story in this collection, like much of Conrad's fiction, deals with corruption and exploitation, this time on a passenger steamer caught in a typhoon in the China Sea.
UN Vagabundo De Las Islas/Outcast of the Islands by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
Under Western Eyes by Joseph Conrad ( 2007)
In this novel about revolutionaries, set in Russia and Switzerland, Conrad presents a psychological portrait of Russia in 1911 through a complex dance of plots and counterplots, loyalty and betrayal.
Victory Victory An Island Tale by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
In Victory (1915) Conrad returns to the Malay Archipelago, to the setting of his first mature novel, Lord Jim, and in Axel Heyst he creates a hero who is in many ways similar to Jim, a noble altruist destroyed by his ideals. Heyst is emotionally crippled by the influence of his dead father, a sceptical philosopher who has bequeathed to Heyst an attitude to life summed up in the father's dying words: 'Look on - make no sound.' Despite this injunction Heyst allows himself to become inextricably involved with an English Cockney girl whom he rescues from Giancomo's Travelling Ladies' Orchestra and carries off to his isolated retreat on the island of Samburan. His action incurs the fatal wrath of Schomberg, the island's innkeeper, who sends in pursuit of Heyst three demonic strangers whose invasion of his island paradise leads rapidly to the novel's violent and tragic close. Victory was the first of Conrad's novels to be completed after the commercial success of Chance (1914) had transformed Conrad's fortunes and made him internationally famous. It is a more complex example of the literary form which Conrad evolved for Lord Jim: a story of action and high adventure coexisting with an exhaustive study of the psychology of the central character.
Wisdom and Beauty from Conrad by Joseph Conrad ( 1973)
Within the Tides Within the Tides by Joseph Conrad ( 1999)
This collection includes "The Planter of Malata," "The Partner," "The Inn of the Two Witches," and "Because of the Dollars."
Youth Heart of Darkness and the End of the Tether by Joseph Conrad ( 1982)
This 1902 story is based on Conrad's often horrific experiences on the sailing-ship "Palestine."
Youth Heart of Darkness Typhoon by Joseph Conrad ( 1993)
Joseph Conrad came to writing after having been a sailor for nearly twenty years. The three long stories in this volume were composed early in his literary career, a few years after a grueling sojourn in the Belgian Congo as the commander of a river steamer. "Youth" (1898) is the first of Conrads stories to feature Captain Marlow, later the narrator of "Heart of Darkness", Lord Jim, and Chance. "Heart of Darkness" (1899), Marlows story of his journey into the jungle to find Kurtz, the tormented white trader, becomes a multileveled commentary on colonialism, evil, and the unknown, emblemized in Kurtz's dying words: "The horror! The horror!" The complex moral issues posed by these tales, and by "Typhoon" (1901), a masterpiece about a storm at sea, anticipated many of the concerns of the later twentieth century. Francis Coppola appropriated Marlow and Kurtz for Apocalypse Now, his movie about the Vietnam War.
Youth and Heart of Darkness Youth and Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 1996)
In HEART OF DARKNESS, Conrad's most existential hero, Marlow, is the commander of a riverboat looking for ivory to trade in the Belgian Congo. His journey into the heart of the Congo is both a thrilling adventure and a symbolic excursion into the depths of the human psyche to confront the evil that exists there. The 1902 story "Youth" is based on Conrad's often horrific experiences on the sailing-ship "Palestine."
Youth, Heart of Darkness, the End of the Tether Youth, Heart of Darkness, the End of the Tether by Joseph Conrad ( 1995)
Youth, a Narrative ; Heart of Darkness ; The End of the Tether by Joseph Conrad ( 1974)
Youth/Heart of Darkness/Typhoon/the Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad ( 2002)
Youth/the End of the Tether by Joseph Conrad ( 1989)
El corazon de las tinieblas/ Heart of Darkness El corazon de las tinieblas/ Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad ( 2006)
uvres by Joseph Conrad, Sylvere Monod ( 1987)

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