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[EDJ]≡ Libro Free The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' Illustrated edition by Joseph Conrad Literature Fiction eBooks

The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' Illustrated edition by Joseph Conrad Literature Fiction eBooks



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Download PDF The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' Illustrated   edition by Joseph Conrad Literature  Fiction  eBooks

Often overlooked because of its controversial title, this novel from Joseph Conrad features a black West Indian protagonist, James Wait, who serves as a sailor on the merchant vessel known as Narcissus. Wait is overcome with illness on the voyage from Bombay to London, and the crew's reaction to his condition speaks volumes about differences in social class, psychology, and culture. A must-read for fans of maritime adventure tales, as well as for readers who appreciate Conrad's finely observed insights into human nature.

The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' Illustrated edition by Joseph Conrad Literature Fiction eBooks

Conrad is, of course, one of the greatest novelists in English literature. This despite English being his third language. The title keeps this book off any modern American college reading list, which is too bad. In addition to being a great sea story, it is a graphic tale of interpersonal actions and regrets. While it might not make a good introduction to Conrad, it certainly would be in the top three. If you've never read Conrad before, start with "Heart of Darkness."

Product details

  • File Size 673 KB
  • Print Length 190 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN 1544639791
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date January 21, 2015
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00SLLZACS

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The Nigger of the 'Narcissus' Illustrated edition by Joseph Conrad Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


I expected this book to be heavier and harder to get through than it turned out to be, because of Joseph Conrad's other writing. But it is very readable and extremely well written. I can see why Joseph Conrad is listed among the great authors. This book justifies that.

The impression that the author gives about the characters on the ship Narcissus, and therefore about the world in general, is that the people in charge of the ship know what they're doing and are hard working, and the common sailors are a motley crew with some good, a bad apple or two, and not too bright.

I agree that mankind isn't too bright. I think that is borne out by all our history books, newspapers, and tv news. But I disagree about the people in charge basically being superior, hard working people. The people in charge of this ship aren't anything to brag about.
this is one of josef conrad's finest books. he was a great writer...winding a tale around a very unique human condition. this book is the most unusual one i have ever read..in that the white man is required by compassion to aid someone who is not of their "kind" even though the detested the job of caring for him...they did it anyway....very unusual.
Despite the unfortunate title, this novella presents the unity and harmony that is required for an effective ship's crew (or any team for that matter), and how easy one person can substantially disrupt that harmony. Followers of contemporary American politics, and specifically the eternal debates over legitimate benefits and 'freeloaders,' may also find some of the themes quite familiar.

As an added benefit, the storm scene about halfway through contains some of the most sublime prose ever to illustrate the majesty and horror of a ship caught in a typhoon. Conrad paints with words scenes JMW Turner only imagined...
this is a good book for a sailor like me. ignore the n-word. the book was written in 1897.

"... the incarnation of barbarian wisdom, serene in the blasphemous turmoil of the world."
There is a narrative of a storm at sea that is so well written you'll be exhausted when you've finished it. Despite the politically incorrect title it is not a racist novel. It is simply a novel written over one hundred years ago. It's important to read new and old books to find out where we've come from. Otherwise we begin to think we are the most advanced thinkers ever to have existed. (By the way, that is faulty and dangerous thinking).
Both previous reviewers of this edtion have focused on the title story, the 'Narcissus', which could be called a short novel or a long story. Fair enough, it is a brillant one with some issues that need discussion.
But don't overlook that this Penguin edition also contains other texts the equally brillant sea tales 'Youth' and 'The Secret Sharer', and then some more.

'The Lagoon' is possibly the weakest story here. A white man travels in Borneo, stays over night in the house of a Malay friend, on the title lagoon, and finds that the woman of the house is dying of fever. The husband tells his guest the story how he eloped with the woman with the help of his brother, who died in the escape, killed by the pursuers. The death of the woman is seen as heavenly retribution for the desertion of the brother, and now the man will go and take revenge. Not very impressive.

'An Outpost of Progress' is a sarcastic story on the pretensions of colonialism. Two Belgian imbeciles (minor Almayers, one could say) try to run a trading station in the Congo colony and fail in cluelessness.

'The Idiots' is set in the Bretagne, where Conrad picked up the story during his honeymoon. A wealthy and anticlerical farmer gets married, so as to have sons who can inherit. Tragically, the couple is hit with misfortune and the first 3 sons turn out to have some kind of unspecified mental handicap, hence the title. The man gets talked into going to church to confess and pray for healthy offspring, but, as the Doors told us you can't petition the Lord with prayer. The next child is not only a girl, bad enough, but again not mentally right. The parents are devastated. The man holds it against the woman, he becomes violent and abusive, she kills him in defense, gets rejected by her mother, and commits suicide.

'The Informer'is a brillant prelude to the 'Secret Agent'. We have one of the anarchists, an aristocratic traitor of his class, tell the narrator, a collector of porcelain, the story how he rooted out a police informer in a London terrorist group by faking a police raid. This is by far the strongest among the 'not sea'-stories in this volume.

'Il Conde' is about an aging count living alone in the Naples area, who gets mugged by a young Camorra (ie local mafia) member. A lot of the tension in this story comes from the fact that Conrad steps very carefully around a central aspect the count probably solicited sexual services from the mugger. We don't know that for sure from the text, though. Conrad picked up this story from a fellow Pole when vacationing in Capri.

'The Duel' is a lengthy semi-farce about two swashbuckling cavalry officers in Napoleon's grande armee. It makes great fun of military codes of honour. The story was filmed with Harvey Keitel and Keith Carradine under the name 'The Duellists'. Amusing, but not much depth here. But you can learn some about the Napoleonic times. (The Poles loved him because he promised them statehood. He couldn't quite deliver on the promise due to the winter campaign disaster, but true love withstands reality.)

If you thought of Conrad only as a seaman, here you have him in a broader spectrum. Not all of it is brillant, but none of it is uninteresting.
A minor classic. Conrad's understanding of sailing and the sea is unsurpassed. Ability with English astonishing as it was his third (or fourth) language. While it is a story of the sea, it is more a story of men and their natures as they relate to the black man aboard ship.
Conrad is, of course, one of the greatest novelists in English literature. This despite English being his third language. The title keeps this book off any modern American college reading list, which is too bad. In addition to being a great sea story, it is a graphic tale of interpersonal actions and regrets. While it might not make a good introduction to Conrad, it certainly would be in the top three. If you've never read Conrad before, start with "Heart of Darkness."
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