Authors: Joseph Conrad, J. H. Stape (Editor), Allan H. Simmons (Editor), Allan H. Simmons (Introduction), J. H. Stape
ISBN-13: 9780141441610, ISBN-10: 0141441615
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: November 2007
Edition: Reprint
Most readers know Joseph Conrad for creating Marlow's harrowing journey through the African Congo in Heart of Darkness. Conrad was adept at capturing the physical and cultural experiences he gleaned from 15 years at sea, but he also wrote political thrillers, essays, and plays based on his own short stories. His best works tend to be brief, but pack in a remarkable perspicacity about humanity's deepest faults.
At its heart, this classic novel is a book about the sea. Published in 1900, Lord Jim was originally intended as a short story. It grew to a full-length book as Conrad explored in great depth the perplexing dilemmas of lost honor and guilt, expiation and heroism.
An English boy from a simple village has bigger dreams than most around him, so he embarks at an early age into a sailor's life. Haunted by guilt over an act of cowardice, Jim becomes an agent at an isolated East Indian trading post. There, his feelings of inadequacy and responsibility are played out to their logical and inevitable end.
The novel, which explores the nature of the human spirit, is a delicately crafted picture of a character who reaches the status of literary hero.
. . . a book of the rare quality of Lord Jim is something to receive with gratitude and joy, and with a sense of a distinction conferred upon the readers of romance. (New York Times -- Books of the Century)
Map of Brown's Voyage to Patusan | 6 | |
Acknowledgements and Editorial Notes | 9 | |
Introduction | 11 | |
Selected Further Reading | 31 | |
Note on the Text | 34 | |
Lord Jim | 41 | |
Notes | 353 | |
Glossary | 367 | |
Chronological Guide | 375 | |
Index of Leitmotifs | 377 |