Joseph Conrad (1857–1924)
Author of Heart of Darkness
About the Author
Joseph Conrad is recognized as one of the 20th century's greatest English language novelists. He was born Jozef Konrad Nalecz Korzeniowski on December 3, 1857, in the Polish Ukraine. His father, a writer and translator, was from Polish nobility, but political activity against Russian oppression led show more to his exile. Conrad was orphaned at a young age and subsequently raised by his uncle. At 17 he went to sea, an experience that shaped the bleak view of human nature which he expressed in his fiction. In such works as Lord Jim (1900), Youth (1902), and Nostromo (1904), Conrad depicts individuals thrust by circumstances beyond their control into moral and emotional dilemmas. His novel Heart of Darkness (1902), perhaps his best known and most influential work, narrates a literal journey to the center of the African jungle. This novel inspired the acclaimed motion picture Apocalypse Now. After the publication of his first novel, Almayer's Folly (1895), Conrad gave up the sea. He produced thirteen novels, two volumes of memoirs, and twenty-eight short stories. He died on August 3, 1924, in England. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Joseph Conrad
Lord Jim / The Nigger of Narcissus / Typhoon / Nostromo / The Secret Agent (1979) 202 copies, 1 review
Typhoon and Other Stories [Amy Foster; Falk: a reminiscence; To-morrow] (1999) 137 copies, 3 reviews
Joseph Conrad: Three Great Tales (Heart of Darkness, Typhoon, Nigger of the Narcissus) (1958) 98 copies
Dominoes, New Edition: Level 3: 1,000-Word Vocabulary The Secret Agent (Dominoes, Level 3: 1,000 Headwords) (1999) 51 copies
Heart of Darkness, The Man Who Would Be King, and Other Works on Empire, A Longman Cultural Edition (2006) 29 copies
Fictions of Empire: Complete Texts With Introduction, Historical Contexts, Critical Essays (New Riverside Editions) (2002) 27 copies
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde / The Secret Sharer / Transformation: Three Tales of Doubles (2008) — Contributor — 23 copies, 2 reviews
The Nigger of the Narcissus / Youth / The Secret Sharer / Freya of the Seven Isles (1950) 22 copies, 1 review
The Complete Short Fiction of Joseph Conrad: The Stories (Conrad, Joseph//Complete Short Fiction of Joseph Conrad) (1992) 22 copies
Three Great Works: Lord Jim; Heart of Darkness; Nostromo (Oxford Paperbacks) (1994) 20 copies, 1 review
Joseph Conrad, life and letters 18 copies
Three Novels by Joseph Conrad: The Nigger of the Narcissus, Heart of Darkness, The Secret Sharer (1970) 14 copies
The Secret Agent 9 copies
Reading & Training : Joseph Conrad : Heart of darkness [book + sound recording] (2008) — Writer — 8 copies
The sisters 7 copies
Il Conde 6 copies
The Definitive Joseph Conrad Collection: The Collected Novels in One Volume (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics) (2009) 6 copies
Laughing Anne & One day more. Two plays by .... With an introduction by John Galsworthy. (1924) 6 copies
Mensen en de zee 5 copies
[unidentified works] 4 copies
The Inheritors / Almayer's Folly — Author — 4 copies
El corazon de las tinieblas, con el Diario del Congo de Conrad y Las voces de Kurtz (Spanish Edition) (2015) 4 copies
Four Sensational Adventure Novels 4 copies
The Selected Letters of Joseph Conrad (The Cambridge Edition of the Letters of Joseph Conrad) (2015) 3 copies
Lord Jim / Victory 3 copies
The Collected Short Stories of Joseph Conrad: 28 Short Stories in One Volume (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics) (2009) 3 copies
Almayer's Folly / Lord Jim 3 copies
Almayer's Folly / Last Essays — Author — 3 copies
Four Fictions 3 copies
Joseph Conrad Collection: Volume III: Nostromo, Typhoon, Because of the Dollars, The Informer, The Brute, An Anarchist, The Duel (2020) 3 copies
50 Masterpieces You Have To Read Before You Die: Volumes 1 To 3 (Golden Deer Classics) (2017) 3 copies
Epistolario 3 copies
Lord Jim, Part 1 of 2 3 copies
At the Door of Darkness 2 copies
Tifón: y otras historias (Avatares) 2 copies
Lord Jim; an authoritative text . . . Edited by Thomas Moser Norton critical editions (1968) 2 copies
Noveller 2 copies
Au cœur des ténèbres - Prépas scientifiques 2017-2018 (GF) (French Edition) (2017) 2 copies, 1 review
La Linea d'Ombra. Cuore di Tenebra 2 copies
Amy Foster ; The lagoon = La laguna 2 copies
Tales of an Eastern Port: The Singapore Novellas of Joseph Conrad (The End of the Tether / The Shadow-Line) (2023) 2 copies
The Warrior's Soul 2 copies
Jarrett(?) and Two other Stories 2 copies
Obras completas IV 2 copies
Heart of Darkness (Annotated): The Original 1899 Edition with New Historical Annotations and Analytical Discussion Questions 2 copies, 2 reviews
The Heart of Darkness: Level 6 2 copies
Karain och andra berättelser 2 copies
The arrow of gold / The rescue 2 copies
Storie di mare e di marinai 2 copies
Öregek és fiatalok kis regények 2 copies
Conrad's Victory (Concord Edition) 2 copies
Romanzi e racconti d'avventura 2 copies
Four great short stories 2 copies
Works (Malay Edition) 2 copies
An Introduction to Conrad. 2 copies
Lord Jim, Part 2 of 2 2 copies
Joseph Conrad: The Complete Novels and Novellas A Biography of the Author (The Greatest Writers of All Time) (2017) 2 copies
Tutti i racconti e i romanzi brevi 2 copies
Dzieła wszystkie T.1-27 1 copy
Náhoda 1 copy
La laguna e altri racconti 1 copy
The Tales V. 4 1 copy
Tajni saputnik 1 copy
The Tales: V. 3 1 copy
The Stories V.2 1 copy
The Stories V. 1 1 copy
Sır Ortağı 1 copy
Hranice stínu : zpověď 1 copy
In the heart of darkness 1 copy
Alma Russa 1 copy
El delator y otros relatos 1 copy
Cronica personal 1912 1 copy
Ifjúság 1 copy
Orlando 1 copy
The Novels of Joseph Conrad 1 copy
ZEMRA E ERRËSIRËS 1 copy
Heart of Darkness (Dover Thrift Editions) by unknown (Green Edition) [Paperback(1990)] (1989) 1 copy
cabo de la cuerda, El 1 copy
El cómplice secreto 1 copy
The Rover Malay Edition 1 copy
Histórias inquietas 1 copy
Gençlik – Yolun Sonu 1 copy
Na izmaku snaga 1 copy
Mladost 1 copy
ll. Conde 1 copy
Un socio 1 copy
The Narrative of Charles Marlow: 4 Book Collection - Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim, Youth & Chance (2017) 1 copy
El corazón de la oscuridad 1 copy
Almayerovo šialenstvo 1 copy
negro del "Narcissus", El 1 copy
Quintette POCHE 1 copy
Conrad to a friend 1 copy
El socio 1 copy
A titkosügynök 1 copy
LA LÍNEA DE SOMBRA 1 copy
El mirall de la mar 1 copy
Tufa o 1 copy
Corsarul 1 copy
Selected short stories 1 copy
Youth and Other Stories 1 copy
Henry James. An Appreciation 1 copy
Heart of Darkness and Other Stories by Joseph Conrad (Annotated) (Literary Classics Collection Book 111) (2012) 1 copy, 1 review
The Shifting of the Fire 1 copy
Dzieła. 27: Przygoda 1 copy
Dzieła. 25: Ostatnie szkice 1 copy
Lagunen : Fortellinger 1 copy
Youth / The Partner 1 copy
Opowiadania wybrane 1 copy
The World at War 1914-1918 1 copy
3: Romanzi occidentali 1 copy
Christmas Day at Sea 1 copy
Mr. Vladimir and Mr. Verloc 1 copy
Well Done! 1 copy
The Best of Joseph Conrad 1 copy
Teatro 1 copy
HLa Ilinea d'ombra 1 copy
Erzählungen 1 copy
Wybór nowel 1 copy
Nostromo (Videotape) 1 copy
The Secret Agent / The Inheritors — Author — 1 copy
Listy 1 copy
A Conrad Companion 1 copy
New Oxford Progressive English Readers: Level 2: Lord Jim (Oxford Progressive English Readers Hong Kong) (2007) 1 copy
Memoirs and essays 1 copy
Novellas and Short Stories 1 copy
Ultimi romanzi 1 copy
Initiation 1 copy
The Men Behind The Trident 1 copy
The Tale and Other Stories 1 copy
Contos do Desassossego 1 copy
Ungdom 1 copy
Freya fra de syv øer 1 copy
Gospoda pod dwiema wiedźmami 1 copy
GERI ZEKALILAR 1 copy
The Inheritors and The Nature of a Crime (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad) (2022) 1 copy
Juventude - ed. clube 1 copy
Corazón de las tinieblas: (y Cuadernos del Congo) (Grandes Clásicos) (Spanish Edition) (2018) 1 copy
Heart of Darkness (British Classics Series): Including Author's Memoirs, Letters & Critical Essays 1 copy
Joseph Conrad TALES OF HEARSAY 1926 Doubleday, Page & Co., NY Leatherbound [Hardcover] unknown 1 copy, 1 review
Cloak and Dagger — Author — 1 copy
Spas 1 copy
Ölüm Seferi 1 copy
Cuore di tenebra - La linea d'ombra: Ediz. integrali (Grandi Classici Vol. 21) (Italian Edition) (2015) 1 copy
The Age Of Fables 1 copy
All men are Brothers 1 copy
Obras completas III 1 copy
Youth / Heart of Darkness — Author — 1 copy
Associated Works
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributor — 269 copies, 1 review
The Graphic Canon, Vol. 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway to Infinite Jest (2013) — Contributor — 162 copies, 1 review
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 146 copies, 1 review
Fifty Years: Being a Retrospective Collection of Novels, Novellas, Tales, Drama, Poetry, and Reportage and Essays: All Drawn from Volumes Issued during the Last Half-Century by… (1965) — Contributor — 56 copies
Oogst Der Tijden. keur uit de werken van schrijvers en dichters aller volken en eeuwen (1940) — Contributor — 12 copies
British Mystery Megapack Volume 3: The Mysterious Affair At Styles, The Secret Agent, The Man Who Would Be King, A Christmas Tragedy and The Dead Secret (2014) 11 copies
Best-in-Books: House of Moreys / Return in August / Small Miracle / Typhoon / Mexico (1954) 6 copies
Die schönsten Bücher für junge Leser: Ein Baum wächst in Brooklyn, Taifun, Der Glöckner von Notre Dame, Lausbubengeschichten (1973) 5 copies
Stories of the Sea — Contributor — 4 copies
The Witch and Warlock MEGAPACK ®: 25 Tales of Magic-Users (2015) — Contributor — 4 copies, 2 reviews
Selected Stories of Great Authors — Contributor — 3 copies
Modern Short Stories — Contributor — 3 copies
Die englische Literatur 09 in Text und Darstellung. 20. Jahrhundert. (2001) — Contributor — 3 copies
Speculative Fiction and Imperialism in Africa (Political Future Fiction: Speculative and Counter-Factual Politics in Edwardian Fiction, Volume 3) (2013) — Contributor — 1 copy
50 seltsame Geschichten — Contributor — 1 copy
Lord Jim 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Korzeniowski, Józef Teodor Konrad Naleçz
- Other names
- Conrad, Joseph
- Birthdate
- 1857-12-03
- Date of death
- 1924-08-03
- Gender
- male
- Education
- homeschooled
- Occupations
- novelist
short story writer
sailor - Relationships
- Conrad, Jessie (wife)
Curle, Richard (friend) - Short biography
- Joseph Conrad was a Polish-British writer regarded as one of the greatest novelists to write in the English language. Though he did not speak English fluently until his twenties, he was a master prose stylist who brought a non-English sensibility into English literature. Conrad wrote stories and novels, many with a nautical setting, that depict trials of the human spirit in the midst of what he saw as an impassive, inscrutable universe.
Conrad is considered an early modernist, though his works contain elements of 19th-century realism. His narrative style and anti-heroic characters have influenced numerous authors, and many films have been adapted from, or inspired by, his works. Numerous writers and critics have commented that Conrad's fictional works, written largely in the first two decades of the 20th century, seem to have anticipated later world events.
Writing near the peak of the British Empire, Conrad drew, among other things, on his native Poland's national experiences and on his own experiences in the French and British merchant navies, to create short stories and novels that reflect aspects of a European-dominated world—including imperialism and colonialism—and that profoundly explore the human psyche. - Cause of death
- heart attack
- Nationality
- Russian Empire (political birthplace)
Ukraine (modern geographical birthplace)
Poland (cultural birthplace)
UK (Naturalised citizenship) - Birthplace
- Terekhove near Berdyczów, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire (now Berdychiv, Ukraine)
- Places of residence
- Bishopsbourne, Kent, England, UK
Lwow, Poland
Vologda, Russia
Marseille, France
Warsaw, Poland
Chernihiv, Ukraine (show all 7)
Krakow, Poland - Place of death
- Bishopsbourne, Kent, England, UK
- Burial location
- Canterbury Cemetery, Canterbury, Kent, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Discussions
Nostromo in George Macy devotees (February 2024)
Cute in George Macy devotees (December 2022)
Heart of Darkness in Someone explain it to me... (August 2021)
BRITISH AUTHOR CHALLENGE JUNE - FRASER & CONRAD in 75 Books Challenge for 2016 (December 2016)
Heart of Darkness: Final Thoughts in Group Reads - Literature (March 2011)
Reviews
Jim is onboard a vessel in the Indian Ocean when tragedy strikes. After he fails to rise to the occasion, it precipitates a personal crisis that pursues him from place to place until he can find an opportunity to make good. It's presented as a story about a man's sense of honour, a rare and outdated motive for any character these days. But human emotion has not evolved so greatly in a hundred and fifty years, so what is this novel really about? Personal integrity and a stable sense of self. show more Guilt, certainly. Not having lived up to the image of oneself. I think peace of mind lies at the heart of it as well. Jim was far more happy when he could idly daydream and reality did not so liberally intrude on his everyday thoughts. Dreamers remain unhappy so long as reality imposes itself.
Jim's endlessly moving on to stay ahead of his past reminded me of trying to run today from from the impacts of relentless online slander and harassment: it can't be done. Jim finds it more honourable, or honest to himself, not to linger in one place any longer than it takes his past to catch up with him, when the only real option is to remain in place and grapple with it. But ultimately in Jim's case he is trying to run from himself, and nobody can run that far. Another intriguing aspect to Jim's guilt which Conrad explores is his consequently falling prey to empathy for another who claims to have committed similar acts, blinded to the critical difference that the other feels no guilt at all.
As the narrator, Marlowe is important in this story as well. He feels a strange affinity that compels him to help Jim, almost a need. He senses what the reader senses, that Jim represents what might happen to any of us, and whether any redemption is possible if we were to commit such a misdeed? Or would we flee the very guilt itself, burying it under rationalizations? Marlowe feels if he doesn't do something to assist Jim, he must surrender to the concept of life as an irredeemable tragedy or, worse, personal integrity as a lie we are ready to shed whenever it's convenient. The episode with Marlowe's friend Stein suggests the story is also about something closer to the everyday, about the regrets we all have, big or small, and our insistence on dwelling upon them as everyone around us wonders why we bother. show less
Jim's endlessly moving on to stay ahead of his past reminded me of trying to run today from from the impacts of relentless online slander and harassment: it can't be done. Jim finds it more honourable, or honest to himself, not to linger in one place any longer than it takes his past to catch up with him, when the only real option is to remain in place and grapple with it. But ultimately in Jim's case he is trying to run from himself, and nobody can run that far. Another intriguing aspect to Jim's guilt which Conrad explores is his consequently falling prey to empathy for another who claims to have committed similar acts, blinded to the critical difference that the other feels no guilt at all.
As the narrator, Marlowe is important in this story as well. He feels a strange affinity that compels him to help Jim, almost a need. He senses what the reader senses, that Jim represents what might happen to any of us, and whether any redemption is possible if we were to commit such a misdeed? Or would we flee the very guilt itself, burying it under rationalizations? Marlowe feels if he doesn't do something to assist Jim, he must surrender to the concept of life as an irredeemable tragedy or, worse, personal integrity as a lie we are ready to shed whenever it's convenient. The episode with Marlowe's friend Stein suggests the story is also about something closer to the everyday, about the regrets we all have, big or small, and our insistence on dwelling upon them as everyone around us wonders why we bother. show less
Jim, for we don’t know him by anymore of a name, is the Chief Mate on the Patna, a vessel transporting hundreds of passengers on pilgrimage. When the vessel collides with something and begins to take on water, the officers abandon the ship in cowardice and fear. Jim abandons the ship with the rest of the crew, though it is unclear, even to him, why he does so. The ship and its passengers survive and, when the rest of the crew disappears, Jim alone stands trial and is stripped of his show more officer certification. Jim meets Marlow, a man who has watched the trial fascinated with the young officer, when Jim is at his lowest, ashamed and near the point of suicide. Marlow, seeing something noble and principled in Jim even if Jim doubts it in himself, introduces Jim to a friend who employees him on a remote island as a post manager. There, Jim begins to escape his past and rebuild his life and confidence, leading a native rebellion against a cruel despot and falling in love. But when a pirate besets the island and kills one of Jim’s best friends and allies, he embraces a final act of honor and sacrifice to finally be rid of the shame that has haunted him.
Joseph Conrad’s [Lord Jim] is a masterpiece of non-linear narrative. Marlow, the narrator, recounts the story of Jim’s life to colleagues, in an attempt to understand the young man. Marlow’s knowledge of Jim and his exploits come from a variety of sources, and not completely from Jim himself. Marlow pieces the events of the Patna together from the versions told him by Jim, told during the trial, told by one of the judges at the trial, and told by other seamen he meets later in life. Marlow’s accounts of Jim’s later life are primarily from the people who knew Jim on the island. And Marlow comes by this information in fits and starts, telling it without chronology but as he learned it. The result is a tale that folds back on itself many, many times, always offering a new and varying understanding of Jim and his life.
Conrad’s appeal is his ability to tell an exciting and readable story while still managing to layer in deep philosophical ideas about honor, redemption, and human nature. Conrad’s novels, and [Lord Jim] most particularly, are obsessed with the idea of a hero in search of his personal identity, torn between yearnings or shortcomings and an ambition for a nobler self. The novel’s place in the canon of literature, and that it remains a very popular novel, say something about what we see of ourselves in that struggle.
Bottom Line: A beautiful, philosophical tale of redemption, told as a thrilling adventure story.
5 bones!!!!!
A favorite for the year! show less
Joseph Conrad’s [Lord Jim] is a masterpiece of non-linear narrative. Marlow, the narrator, recounts the story of Jim’s life to colleagues, in an attempt to understand the young man. Marlow’s knowledge of Jim and his exploits come from a variety of sources, and not completely from Jim himself. Marlow pieces the events of the Patna together from the versions told him by Jim, told during the trial, told by one of the judges at the trial, and told by other seamen he meets later in life. Marlow’s accounts of Jim’s later life are primarily from the people who knew Jim on the island. And Marlow comes by this information in fits and starts, telling it without chronology but as he learned it. The result is a tale that folds back on itself many, many times, always offering a new and varying understanding of Jim and his life.
Conrad’s appeal is his ability to tell an exciting and readable story while still managing to layer in deep philosophical ideas about honor, redemption, and human nature. Conrad’s novels, and [Lord Jim] most particularly, are obsessed with the idea of a hero in search of his personal identity, torn between yearnings or shortcomings and an ambition for a nobler self. The novel’s place in the canon of literature, and that it remains a very popular novel, say something about what we see of ourselves in that struggle.
Bottom Line: A beautiful, philosophical tale of redemption, told as a thrilling adventure story.
5 bones!!!!!
A favorite for the year! show less
A novella, rather than a novel. But one of the most devastating looks into the folly of colonialism ever penned. I would say this book was often aped, but never bettered. We embark on a voyage away from the clean seas, into the darkest, and most diseased parts of the continent, and the soul, intent on what happened to a man we once revered, and find out what has become of him, and of ourselves.
Enjoyable novel that exposes self-deception as the origin of the downfall of most of the characters. None of them has much that is redeemable about themselves, Europeans or Malays.
The tropical setting permeates every chapter. Nature is an overpowering force that slowly strangles judgement, hope and sanity. The descriptions of nature's moods and atmosphere are an outstanding feature. They speak to the murky and underhand behaviour of men and women, black and white who eke out a living in show more isolation and in diminishing hopes show less
The tropical setting permeates every chapter. Nature is an overpowering force that slowly strangles judgement, hope and sanity. The descriptions of nature's moods and atmosphere are an outstanding feature. They speak to the murky and underhand behaviour of men and women, black and white who eke out a living in show more isolation and in diminishing hopes show less
Lists
Conrad ranked (16)
BBC Big Read (1)
Elegant Prose (1)
DELETE (1)
Ocean Setting (1)
Must read (1)
Franklit (1)
BitLife (1)
Books I've read (1)
Overdue Podcast (1)
Obama Reads (1)
Books I've Read (1)
BBC Top Books (1)
5 Best 5 Years (1)
Uni (1)
100 (1)
Romans (1)
Read These Too (1)
United Kingdom (1)
bound (1)
Carole's List (1)
"We" narration (1)
Greatest Books (1)
Classics (1)
Summer Books (1)
100 knjiga (1)
Best Sea Stories (2)
19th Century (2)
My TBR (2)
1890s (2)
Five star books (2)
Reading LIst (2)
Out of Copyright (3)
A Novel Cure (2)
Folio Society (8)
Unread books (4)
Favourite Books (3)
Take Four Books (3)
Fiction For Men (3)
. (3)
Modernism (3)
. (3)
AP Lit (3)
Read in 2006 (2)
Havet (1)
Best First Lines (1)
Short and Sweet (1)
Read in 2007 (1)
Sonlight Books (2)
BBC Big Read (1)
Translingualism (1)
Africa (1)
Revolutions (1)
Ambleside Books (1)
Victorian Period (1)
1910s (1)
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 720
- Also by
- 133
- Members
- 90,695
- Popularity
- #106
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 1,261
- ISBNs
- 5,811
- Languages
- 37
- Favorited
- 301
































































































