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Loading... The Shadow Line (original 1917; edition 1932)by Joseph Conrad
Work InformationThe Shadow-Line: A Confession by Joseph Conrad (1917)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Me aburrió mucho que no lo termine de leer ( ) For a novella this takes way to long to get underway, but once we're all aboard and firmly in the doldrums, as idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean, wasting away in a malarial miasma under the curse of the malevolent ex-Captain who now resides deep in Davy Jones's locker, the pages turn fast. Conrad does what he does so well, write about internal change (in this case crossing the "shadow-line" between youth and adulthood). Here he crafts a great atmosphere of supernatural dread, especially in the nocturnal scenes and in the characters of the tenacious first mate Burns and the composed, resilient but scarily vulnerable steward, Ransome. Just out of Bangkok, aboard his first command, the unnamed narrator of The Shadow-Line and his crew are all but becalmed in the Gulf of Siam. Tortured by the lack of wind, things are made worse for the vessel and its men when all but one member of the crew is taken down by fever. Mental and physical trials are forced upon the new captain, who only just by the final act of facing down a sudden tempest is given the path to Singapore and safety. The "shadow-line" in this novella is the passage from youth to adulthood. As such it is the most perfect example of Conrad's ongoing preoccupation with heroes caught betwixt and between, in a liminal rite of passage. Seemingly magical qualities ensnare the captain, allowing him to illuminate and preserve those sitting around him--his sickened crew. Like a king advancing to take his throne by test of fortitude, his successful transition stands between regaining the crews' life and seeing them plunge to their deaths. And at the end? Our captain acknowledges that he is now "old." He has gained wisdom and overcome his "faint heart." The process of life endures and proceeds inevitably until someday, someone will emerge from his youth to replace the ancient captain and restore the "Wasteland" to its vigor once more. See Jessie Weston and James Frazer. no reviews | add a review
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HTML: The Shadow Line is a novella by Joseph Conrad. A young man becomes captain of a ship in the Orient, and his experiences bring him to the threshold of his development into maturity: the shadow line. The story contrasts the young man and his expectations with the wiser experience of his elders. The novella has been read as a comment on the first world war, because of its preoccupation with camaraderie in the face of prolonged hardship. .No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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